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A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 



A HISTORY OF 
ARABIAN MUSIC 

TO THE XIIlTH CENTURY 

BY 

HENRY GEORGE FARMER 

M.A., PH.D., M.R.A.S. 

AUTHOR OF 

" The Arabian Influence on Musical Theory." 

" The Arabic Musical Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library" 

" The Influence of Music : From Arabic Sources." 




LUZAC & co. 

46 GREAT RUSSELL STREET, LONDOW, "W.C. 

(Opposite the British Museum} 
1929 



Printed in Great Britain 
at the BURLEIGH PRESS, Lewin's Mead, BRISTOL, 



To THE MEMORY OF MY 
MU'ALLIM, 

THE LATE 

REV. DR. T. H. WEIR, 

M.A., B.D., D.D., 

LECTURER IN ARABIC IN 

THE UNIVERSITY OF GLASGOW (1902-28), 

THIS VOLUME IS DEDICATED 

IN TOKEN OF GRATITUDE. 



" I regard it as a high compliment having been invited 
to write the Preface to a treatise which is the fruit of so 
much research, and which displays so much industry and 
accuracy. It is, however, certain that you require no intro- 
duction from me to the Orientalist public, and none from any- 
one to the musical. I might, therefore, be charged with 
presumption if I accepted your invitation. 

" Further, I find a fair number of propositions in the 
work which differ seriously from my own conclusions ; the 
latter may certainly be erroneous, and I am most willing 
and even anxious that such as differ from them should be 
put before the world. ... I am sure therefore that bearing 
in mind these considerations, you will accept my cordial 
thanks for your proposal while excusing me for declining it." 
PROFESSOR D. S. MARGOLIOUTH, Oxford University. 



PREFACE 

Although this work was commenced fifteen years ago, 
it was not until 1919-25, whilst I was fulfilling a Research 
Studentship at the University of Glasgow that it assumed 
its present form, During this period I had the benefit 
of the teaching, on the linguistical and historical side, of 
the late Rev. Dr. T. H. Weir, a scholar of rare ability, 1 as 
well as the occasional guidance, in matters relating to the 
science of music, of the late Dr. H. J. Watt. 2 Death has 
claimed both of these savants. Nevertheless, I take this 
opportunity of acknowledging, more especially to the 
former, my deep appreciation of their advice and help, 
always given ungrudgingly. 

In this work I have observed the conventional chrono- 
logical method because it was best suited to my purpose. 
Only by adopting this system could I have conveniently 
demonstrated how culture stood in relation to the social 
and political regimen. Each chapter is divided into three 
sections. The first deals with the social and political 
factors which determined the general musical culture. 
The second describes the musical life of the period, together 
with details of the theory and practice of music. This 
has been kept free, as far as was possible, from technicali- 
ties, although the author hopes to deal with the theory and 
science of Arabian music in detail, from an historical 
standpoint, in a companion volume. The third section is 
devoted to biographies of all the celebrated composers, 
singers, instrumentalists, theorists, scientists, and littera- 
teurs. 

In the transliteration of Arabic and Persian words I 
have adopted the system approved by the International 
Congress of Orientalists (1894), and recommended by the 

1 The Lecturer in Arabic. 

The Lecturer on Psychology. 

vii 



viii PREFACE 

Royal Asiatic Society, with but slight modifications, 
notably in the non-observance of the ligature or logotype 
in th, dh, etc. In regard to proper names, I have kept to 
Arabic forms so far as I have considered reasonable. 
For instance, I have written Al-Mausil rather than Mosul, 
but with Mecca, Damascus, Cordova, I have fallen back 
on conventional usage, although I have only made a half- 
concession in Al- Medina. In dispensing with the forms 
Caliph and Caliphate in favour of Khalif and Khalifate, 
rather than the more proper Khalifa and Khilafat, I 
sincerely trust that I have not committed too serious a 
breach of convention. In the question of the use of the 
Arabic definite article, I probably have not always been 
consistent. A similar criticism may also be urged 
against my transliteration of the hamza. As for any 
inconsistency in plural forms, I have, generally speaking, 
only used Arabic plurals in words of non-European usage. 

The work has been planned to satisfy both the orienta- 
list and the musician, and in spite of the reputed fate of 
those who attempt to serve two masters, I can only hope 
that in this case the exception proves the rule. 

My sincere thanks are due to Professor Dr. D. S. Margo- 
liouth, of Oxford, and to Professor Dr. W. B. Stevenson, 
of Glasgow, for useful hints. To Dr. Richard Bell, of 
Edinburgh, and Mr. John Walker, M.A., I owe an 
acknowledgment for having read the proof sheets of 
this work. 

Glasgow, 1928 



CONTENTS 

PAGE 

PREFACE vii 

INTRODUCTION xi 

CHAPTER I 
THE DAYS OF IDOLATRY (ist to 6th century) i 

CHAPTER II 
ISLAM AND Music 20 

CHAPTER III 
THE ORTHODOX KHALIFS (632-661) 39 

CHAPTER IV 
THE UMAYYADS (661-750) 59 

CHAPTER V 
THE 'ABBASIDS (The Golden Age, 750-847) 90 

CHAPTER VI 
THE 'ABBASIDS (The Decline, 847-945) - - - - 137 

CHAPTER VII 
THE 'ABBASIDS (The Fall, 945-1258) - ... 178 

BIBLIOGRAPHY 231 

INDEX 249 



DESCRIPTION OF THE PLATES. 

Frontispiece. 

From the Kitab al-mustqi of Al-Farabi (d. 950) in the 
Bibliotheca Nacionale at Madrid. 1 This copy dates from 
the I2th century, and it is claimed that it was made for 
Ibn Bajja or Avenpace (d. 1138). 2 Whether this design 
of the shdhrud appeared in the original work of Al-Farabi, 
or whether it is an addition by a later copyist, we have no 
evidence. The design does not appear in the Leyden 
copy. 3 Whilst its zither-like form agrees with the nth 
century descriptions of Ibn Sina 4 and Ibn Zaila, 5 its 
lute-like structure is vouched for by Ibn Ghaibi in the 
I5th century. 6 

To face page 108. 

From the Risdla fl khubr ta'Kf al-alhan of Al-Kindi 
(d. 874) in the British Museum. 7 This transcript was 
made in the year 1661, and the scribe informs us that it 
was copied from a " defective " and " unreliable " 
exemplar which had been written in the city of Damascus 
in the year 1224. In this treatise, Al-Kindi deals with 
the theory of music almost entirely as he had learned it 
from the Greek treatises, and his system of notation was 
piobably influenced by these. 

To face page 202. 

From the Kitab al-adwar of Saf I al-Dln 'Abd al-Mu'min 
(d. 1294) in the British Museum. 8 The MS. was copied 
in the year 1390. This folio gives a phonetic notation of 
a song in the Nauruz melodic mode (awdz) and the Ramal 
rhythmic mode (darb). This scheme of notation, which 
may be found as early as Ibn Zaila (d. 1048), 9 was pro- 
bably borrowed from Nikomachos. 

No. 602, fol. 18, v. Cf. Robles, Catdlago, p. 249. 

Or. 651. India Office MS., No. 1811, fol. 173. 

Brit. Mus. MS., Or. 2361, fol. 235, 

Bodleian MS., Marsh, 282, fol. 79. 

No. 2361, fol. 167, v. Or. 136, fol. 38, v. 

Brit. Mus. MS., Or. 2361, fol. 226. See my Facts for the Arabian 
Musical Influence, p. 92, and Studies in Oriental Musical Instru- 
ments, pp. 34-5. 

X 



INTRODUCTION 

" We must cease to regard Arabia as a land of deserts and barbarism ; 
it was, on the contrary, a trading centre of the ancient world, and the 
Muslims who went forth from it to conquer Christendom and found 
empires, were but the successors of those who, in earlier times, had 
exercised a profound influence upon the destinies of the East." 

Professor A. H. Sayce, Early Israel, p. 128. 

ALMOST everyone who has written on the subject of the 
music of the Arabs has looked, in the matter of origins, 
to either Greece or Persia. Much of this is perhaps 
excusable, seeing that until recent years we knew next 
to nothing of pre-Islamic Arabia save what could be 
gleaned from Greek and Latin authors or the legendary 
material handed down from pre-Islamic Arabic sources. 
Thus the temptation to look towards Greece and Persia 
in this question was considerable, especially when we 
consider the position of Arabia and the outside civiliza- 
tions which came in cultures-contact with it. Yet the 
truth is that Arabian culture did not originate in that 
shadowy period of the so-called " Days of Idolatry " 
when Greek, Roman, Byzantine, or Persian hegemonies 
were at their height, any more than it began with Islam, 
but dates back to a period long anterior to them all. 

The excavations made in recent years on the sites of 
ancient Semitic civilizations, have wrought wondrous 
changes in our notions of the world's culture-history. 
The earliest reference to Arabia reaches at present to the 
third millennium B.C., when we have cuneiform inscrip- 
tions which mention lands identified as being situated in 
Arabia. Under the Babylonian ruler Naram-Sin (ca. 2600 
B.C.) a king of Magan or Makkan was conquered. In 
the time of Gudea (ca. 2400 B.C.) we read of a kingdom 
called Kimash or Mashu, as well as a place named Khakhu, 
and a land of Malukhkha. Finally, an inscription of 

xi 



xii INTRODUCTION 

Arad-Nannar (ca. 2300 B.C.) mentions a region known 
as Sabu. Although the precise location of these lands 
has been the subject of controversy, yet there is general 
agreement that they were situated in Arabia. Both 
Magan and Sabu have been identified with the South 
Arabian kingdoms of Ma' an (Ma'in) and Saba'. Kimash 
or Mashu has been located in Central Arabia, whilst 
Khakhu and Malukhkha are said to have been in Western 
Arabia, the latter being considered the land of the 
Banu 'Amaliq. 

At the beginning of the first millennium B.C., we cer- 
tainly have definite evidence of some of these Arab 
kingdoms. The South Arabian monuments reveal two 
important kingdoms, Ma'in with its capitals at Qarnawu 
and Yathil, and Saba' with its capital at Ma'rib. They 
each had their turn at dominion apparently, and both 
extended their power as far north as the Gulf of 'Aqaba, 
where we read of an Arab territory called Musran. 
About the sixth century B.C., the latter country fell 
to the Arab Lihyanids, who made their capital at Al-Hijr. 
The Arab Nabataeans, about the fourth century B.C., 
then took the political lead in these parts, with their 
capital at Petra. They continued their dominion until 
Trajan subdued them in 106 A.D. Meanwhile, other 
Arab kingdoms had sprung up further south. From 
Theophrastos (fourth cent. B.C.) we learn that there were 
four kingdoms south of the Gulf of 'Aqaba. These were 
Saba', Hacjramaut, Qataban, and Mamali (Mali). Eratos- 
thenes (third cent. B.C.) mentions Ma'in with Qarnawu 
as capital, Saba' with Ma'rib, Qataban with Tamna', 
and Hacjramaut with Sbabwat. 

Thanks to the labours of travellers, excavators, and 
scholars, we are able to appreciate that these ancient Arab 
kingdoms were in possession of a civilization quite as 
important in its way as that of Babylonia-Assyria. 
" In South Arabia," says Dr. Fritz Hommel, " we come 
upon traces of a high civilization at a very early period." 1 
Later research has enabled this scholar to say almost 
definitely that " South Arabian civilization with its 

Hommel, Ancient Hebrew Tradition, 77. 



INTRODUCTION xiii 

gods, incense altars, inscriptions, forts and castles, 
must have been in a flourishing condition as early as the 
beginning of the first millennium B.C." 1 The greatness 
of these civilizations is testified not only by the monu- 
ments themselves, but by the Babylonian- Assyrian 
cuneiform inscriptions, the Old Testament, and classical 
authors. Whilst admitting the all-pervading influence 
of Babylonian-Assyrian culture, it must also be allowed 
that Arabia itself played no small part in determining 
this culture. Hommel has pointed out that the great 
importance of the Arabs for the ancient East lies in the 
domain of civilization and religion, and if we mention 
but two words, incense and moon-worship, we can realize 
how the Arabs influenced their nearer neighbours, especi- 
ally the Hebrews and Greeks. 2 

Yet scarcely a line has come down to us concerning the 
music of the ancient Arabs. That their music was 
appreciated is borne out by an inscription of Ashurbanipal 
(seventh cent. B.C.), where Arab prisoners toiling for their 
Assyrian masters whiled away their hours in singing 
(alili) and music (ninguti), which so delighted the 
Assyrians that they begged for more. 8 This need not, 
however, preclude us from surmising what the musical 
culture of the ancient Arab kingdoms was like, because 
in view of the definite similarity in general culture 
between all the Semitic groups, especially in religion, with 
which music was so closely associated, it could scarcely 
have been otherwise than that a certain level of musical 
culture was maintained among the Assyrians, Phoenicians, 
Hebrews, and Arabs, who were connected by political 
and commercial ties, and above all, speaking practically 
the same language. In all the other groups we see the 
inordinate elevation to which music had been raised, 
and if we take into consideration the accounts of the 
Greeks and Romans concerning the Arab kingdoms 
whose luxurious living was the envy of their neighbours, 
and whose wealth exceeded that of all other nations, 

1 Encyclopedia of Islam, i, 380. 

Ibid., i, 379- 

Schradcr, Keilinschriftliche Bibliothek, ii, 234. 



xiv INTRODUCTION 

one can only assume that they must have been as well 
served in matters musical as the other Semites. 

Professor Stephen Langdon, the eminent Assyriologist, 
has demonstrated the close connection between the music 
of the Assyrian and Hebrew cults. If names can tell 
us anything, this relationship can be extended to the 
Arabs. The sharru or precentor in Assyria can be traced 
in the shd'ir or poet-soothsayer of the Arabs. The 
Assyrian hymn was the shiru, and in it we recognize 
the Hebrew shir (song) and the Arabic shi'r (verse, 
knowledge). The psalm in Assyrian was the zamdru, 
which equates with the Hebrew zimrdh (song) and 
mizmor (psalm). Certainly the Assyrian shigu or 
penitential psalm is identical with the shiggdidn of 
the Hebrews and the shajan of the Arabs in origin. 
In a like way the allii or wail in Assyrian may be linked 
up with the Hebrew and Arabic elal and wilwdl. Indeed, 
the Assyrian shidru or recitation may find its cognate 
in the inshdd of the Arabs. 

The generic term for music in Assyrian was nigutu or 
ningutu, the root being nagu ("to sound"). Hebrew 
furnishes its like in ndgan (" to play a stringed instru- 
ment"), hence negindh (music, stringed instruments). 
In Assyrian the word 'an stood for song. It is the 
Hebrew 'dndh and the Arabic ghind'. Scholars have 
even identified the Assyrian alalu with the noisy tehilldh 
of the Hebrews and the tahlil of the Arabs. The word 
ndqu in Assyrian means " to lament." and this must 
surely be connected with the Hebrew nehl and the 
Arabic nauh (lamentory song). 

As for musical instruments, the Babylonian- Assyrian 
tabbalu (drum) and adapu (tambourine) can be matched 
by the Aramaic-Hebrew tibela and toph and the Arabic 
tabl and duff. The Hebrew reed-pipe called zemer and 
the Arabic zamr, are manifestly identical, just as the 
Assyrian qarnu, the Hebrew qeren, and the Arabic qarn 
(horn), and the Assyrian ibbubu or imbubu, the Aramaic 
abubd, and the Arabic unbub (pipe) are connected. 
These very striking similarities in nomenclature would 
not, however, be of such import if we did not know 



INTRODUCTION xv 

of the close cultural connection between all these 
Semites. 

About the opening of the Christian era, powerful forces 
came into operation which were to change the entire 
political and economic life of the peninsula. The decay 
and final extinction of the great cities of the Mesopotamian 
plains in the fall of Babylonia and Assyria must already 
have reacted on the Arab kingdoms who, from time 
immemorial, had controlled the great trade routes. 
Then came the decline of the Phoenician markets, which 
was a further setback. More serious still was the opening 
of the sea-trade route up the Red Sea by the Romans 
about the first century A.D. This completely ruined the 
southern overland caravan trade which had been the 
mainstay of the Arab kingdoms of the south. Political 
events made matters worse. In the north, where the 
Nabatseans held the northern caravan entrepots, the 
end came swifter still when the Romans put Palmyra 
to the sword in 272 A.D. The Arab kingdoms never 
recovered from the economic pressure and political 
stress. Migrations became the order of the day. The 
mighty cities were deserted and left to crumble. Yet 
Arabia was not smitten with sterility. From this womb 
of the Semites was to issue one more child which was 
to become the progenitor of the Islamic civilization 
of the Khalifate, a worthy successor of the great Semitic 
civilizations of the past. Just as the latter had been 
built up by successive migrations from the heart of Arabia, 
so the former was to receive a similar impulse. This 
time, however, it is more clearly defined, and it is here 
that we take up our story of the History of Arabian 
Music. 



CHAPTER I 

THE DAYS OF IDOLATRY 
(From the First to the Sixth Century) 

" Be content to listen to the singing-girl who delights us on a cloudy 
day." 

'Abd al-MasIJi ibn 'Asala (6th century ?), Al-mufad$aliyyat. 

THIS is the period which Muslims have called the 
jahiliyya or " Days of Ignorance," meaning by that, 
ignorance of the revelations of the Prophet Muhammad. 1 
In truth, these were days of ignorance, since not only 
had political, economic, and cultural decay set in, but all 
knowledge of the old Arab civilizations which had flour- 
ished for two millenniums was practically lost. When 
the Islamic historians came to deal with this period thev 

ERRATA 
Page 29, line 18. For " JIanbal " read " Hanbal." 

Page 46, lines 33-4. For " in Al-Yaman, but also common 
perhaps in Al-Hijaz," read " in Al-Hijaz, and the 
latter in Al-Yaman." 

Page 201, line 5. Delete " by birth certainly." 
Page 223, line 3. For " Almeira " read " Almeria." 



1 The jahiliyya properly refers to the period from the " creation of 
the world " to the birth of Muhammad. 
Qw'an, vii, xi, xxvi, xlvi. 

I 



2 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

of the ancient Arab kingdoms was due, as has already 
been pointed out, to political and economic forces, speeded 
up by subsequent migrations. 

Historians are in common agreement that the first line 
of the migratory Arabs from South Arabia began to 
move northwards about the second century A.D. 1 This 
was the migration of the Banu Azd, connected in legend 
with the bursting of the famous Dyke of Ma'rib. 2 The 
movement soon extended, and fresh Arab blood was 
introduced not only into Al-Hijaz, Al-Yamama, 'Uman, 
Hajar, and Al-Bahrain, but also into Mesopotamia and 
Syria, where there were still to be found the descendants 
of those Semitic peoples whose culture had been of such 
immense value to civilization. Much of this culture 
had been preserved (with the help of Greece and Persia) 
by Arab Chaldaeans, Nabataeans and Palmyrenes, and 
by Aramaeans, Jews, and Syrians, who formed the bulk 
of the population. This culture came to the new Arab 
settlers, although it only blossomed into luxuriance in 
the days of Islam. 



South Arabia, the most ancient of the Arab kingdoms, 
despite the political and commercial decline, still echoed 
some of the old culture. At the opening of the Christian 
era there were Sabaean rulers at Ma'rib from the Banu 
Hamdan. In the fourth century the " Kings of Saba' " 
belonged to the Banu Himyar, a dynasty which lasted 
until the year 525. Music and poetry flourished, and 
although none of the authors of the Mu'allaqdt came from 
these parts (Al-A'sha lived in Najran), many of those 
in the Mufaddaliyydt and the Hamdsa were of southern 
blood. We read of a tubba* ruler named Ibn Allshra 
who was surnamed Dhu Jadan (Owner of the Beautiful 
Voice). 3 The last tubba' ruler, 'Als ibn Zaid (d. 525) 
also bore this laqdb or nickname, and Al-IsfahanI says 

* Muir, Mohammad, xc. Cf. Nicholson, Literary History of the Arabs, 

15, !7- 

Al-Mas'udI, iii, 378. 

Caussin de Perceval, Hist. Arabes, i, 75-6, 



THE DAYS OF IDOLATRY 3 

that he was the first [? among princes] to sing in Al- 
Yaman. * The pre-Islamic song of Al-Yaman is mentioned 
as late as the ninth century, since Al-Mas'udi quotes 
Ibn Khurdadhbih to the effect that the people of Al- 
Yaman practised two kinds of music : the himyari and 
the hanafl.* The former was evidently the music of the 
Himyarites and the latter perhaps that of more recent 
adoption. Several musical instruments used in Islamic 
times were of South Arabian provenance and among them 
the mi'zaf (? barbiton) and the kus (large kettledrum). 
Even to-day, the Arabs of Al-IJijaz say that the best 
and real Arabian music comes from Al-Yaman, whilst 
the Hatjrami minstrels are always considered to be 
superior artistes* 

Al-Hijaz was a land of some commercial importance 
even in these days. At the opening of the Christian 
era, Mecca, which was then known as Makuraba, was 
under the dominion of the Banu Jurhum, who, tradition 
says, succeeded the shadowy Banu 'Amaliq. Al-Medma, 
or as it was then called Yathrib, was practically in the 
hands of the Banu Nadir, Banu Quraiza, and other tribes 
who professed the Jewish faith. 4 In the waves of migra- 
tion from the south already adverted to, clans of the 
Banu Azd became masters of these two important towns 
in Al-Hijaz and their surrounding territory. Under the 
rule of the Quraish at Mecca, its ka'ba together with the 
fair at 'Ukaz, made these parts a sort of national rendez- 
vous which neither the ancient renown of Al-Yaman 
nor the brilliant culture of Al-HIra and Ghassan could 
ever hope to rival. It became the centre of the indigenous 
arts. At 'Ukaz, the poets and minstrels from all parts of 
the peninsula vied with each other for supremacy in 
their art. It was here that the famous Mu'allaqdt 
were recited or sung. 5 Singing Girls (qainat or qiyari) 
were famous in these days, 8 and legend takes them back 

1 Aghanl, iv, 37. 

1 Al-Mas'udi, viii, 93. 

Personal information from Professor Snouck Hurgronje. 

Aghanl, xiii, no. Caussin de Perceval, op. cit., i, 214, 644. 

Encyclopedia of Islam, i, 403. Entire qasidas are still sung by the 
badawt Arabs. Burckhardt, Bedouins and Wahabys, i, 75, 253. 

Aghanl > viii, 2. Cf. the Assyrian qinitu. 



4 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

to the time of the Banu 'Amaliq. 1 Musicians from 
Al-Hijaz found favour even at other courts. 2 Among 
the musical instruments in use we read of the mizhar 
(lute), mi'zafa (? psaltery), qu$sdba (flute), mizmdr 
(reed-pipe) and duff (tambourine). Al-Hijaz even claims 
to be the fount of music, and we have the author of the 
'Iqd al-farid saying that it is clear and evident that the 
origin and source of music (ghind*) are to be traced to the 
slaves in the market towns of the Arabs such as Al- 
Medma, Al-Ta'if, Khaibar, Wadi al-Qura, and others. 3 
Al-Hira was another important culture centre. Meso- 
potamia, in spite of the disappearance of the great 
Babylonian- Assyrian cities, could still boast of large 
towns peopled by Chaldaeans, Aramaeans, and Jews, 
and, in spite of foreign domination, still carried on much 
of the old Semitic culture. 4 As a result of the Arab 
migration from South Arabia, a group of tribes, con- 
federated under the title of the Tanukh, 5 settled in Hajar 
and Al-Bahrain, after subduing the older population 
who were Aramaeans and Chaldaeans. 6 About the third 
century they moved northwards into Mesopotamia, 
establishing themselves in the land called 'Iraq 'Arabi, 
making Al-Anbar, and later Al-Hira (close by ancient 
Babylon) their chief town. Under a later dynasty, 
the Lakhmids, Al-Hira became one of the celebrated 
cities of the East, and although to some extent impressed 
by Persian influences, 7 it deviated but little from Semitic 
ideals. It was to Al-Hira that Bahram Ghur (430-8), 
the Persian monarch, was sent, as a prince, to be educated. 
Here, he was taught music among other Arab accom- 
plishments. 8 When he ascended the throne, one of his 
first edicts was to improve the status of the musicians 

Al-Mas'udl, iii, 157. Aghanl, xvi, 15. 'Iqd al-farid, iii, 186. 

King, Babylon, 284-7. Greek culture was certainly felt, but this 
only made headway on the lower Tigris which had become the political 
and industrial centre instead of on the Euphrates as formerly. King, 
op. cit., 287-8. 

Aghanl, xi, 161. 

In the Aghanl they are called Nabataeans, but the Aramaeans are 
intended. See Nicholson, Lit. Hist, of the Arabs, xxv. 

T Persia herself was more influenced by the Semites. Browne, 
Lit. Hist, of Persia, i, 65-6. 

Al- jabaxl, i, 185. MIrkhwand, i (2), 356. 



THE DAYS OF IDOLATRY 5 

at the Persian court. 1 Al-Tabari tells us about the last 
Lakhmid king of Al-Hira, Al-Nu'man III (ca. 580-602), 
that among his shortcomings was an extraordinary 
passion for music. 

The influence of Al-Hira on the culture of Arabia 
generally was considerable. It was the literary centre 
from whence poetry radiated to all parts. 2 It was at the 
Lakhmid court that the poets Al-Nabigha, Tarafa, 
'Amr ibn Kulthum, and 'Adi ibn Zaid were treated with 
princely munificence. Seeing how closely music was 
allied to poetry, it may be conjectured that the former 
was equally favoured. It was from Al-Hira that Al- 
Hijaz borrowed a more artistic song than the nasb 
hitherto used, and also, it would seem, the wooden- 
bellied 'ud (lute) in the place of the skin-bellied mizhar.* 
It was here, too, that the anj or jank (harp) and tunbur 
(pandore) were countenanced. 

Syria, at the time that we are dealing with, was also 
populated by a considerable Arabian element. The 
Arab Nabataeans of the north-west had extended their 
influence as far north as Palmyra (Tadmor), including 
Damascus and Bosra. When Trajan broke up the 
Nabataean kingdom of Petra in 106 A.D., the political 
and commercial leadership of the Nabataean communities 
passed to Palmyra. This remained an important culture 
centre until the debacle of 272 A.D., when its inhabitants 
were put to the sword. Of the specific culture of the 
Nabataeans we have a reliable index in the art remains of 
Petra, Bosra, and Palmyra. Whilst we see plainly the 
impress of Greece and Rome, there is still the clearest 
evidence that the older Semitic ideals still pervaded the 
social and religious life. We know little of the musical 
culture of the Nabataeans. Strabo tells us that they 
employed musicians at their entertainments. 4 At 
Palmyra we read of the kinora ( = Heb. kinnor).* 

1 Al-Mas'udi, iii, 157. 

Huart, Arabic Literature, 12. Nicholson, op. cit. t 37. 

Al-Mas'udi, viii, 94. 

4 Strabo, xvi, iv, 27. 

Zeitschrift d. Deutschen Morgenldndischen Gesellschaft, xviii, 105. 
See also the Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum, ii, No. 268, and the 
Mission arMologique en Arable by Jaussen and Savignac, p. 217. 

B 



6 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

After the fall of Palmyra, the territory hitherto con- 
trolled by the Nabataeans came under the jurisdiction 
of the Ghassanids, who had just then migrated from the 
south. The shaikhs of the Ghassanids became phylarchs 
of the Byzantine Emperors for the old Provincia Arabia 
as well as Syria, and with them the influence of Byzantium 
was probably considerable. On this account perhaps, 
it is said that the culture of the Ghassanids was the most 
advanced among the Arab kingdoms of the Days of 
Idolatry. 1 Both Al-Nabigha and Hassan ibn Thabit 
have given glowing accounts of the Ghassanid court, 
where not only Arab musicians from Mecca and else- 
where were favoured, but singing-girls from Al-Hira 
and Byzantium. 2 We are told that they played on the 
barbat, which was either a lute or a barbiton. 

On the plains of upper Mesopotamia were the Jarmaqs, 
(Jaramiqa), who, together with the Nabataeans, are said 
to have used a stringed instrument, the playing of which 
was similar to that of the tunbur* Even among the 
badawi Arabs of the interior we find that music was 
appreciated. We read not only of the professional 
singing-girl, but of the matrons of the tribe playing and 
singing. Musical instruments are frequently mentioned 
among them, such as the mizhar (lute), kiran (lute), 
muwattar (lit. " a stringed instrument") 4 ; mizmar 
(reed-pipe), duff (tambourine), jaldjil (bells), and ndqus 
(clapper). 



With the Arabs, whose strong point is genealogy, 
music is given its appropriate family tree. Jubal the 
son of Cain (Qain) is credited with the first song, which 

1 Encyclopedia of Islam, ii, 142. 

* Aghdnl, xvi, 15. 

* Al-Mas'udl, viii, 91. The text has ghlrwdra but it is corrupt, and 
Barbier de Meynard thinks that the word kinnara is intended. On the 
other hand a MS. in the Berlin Staatsbibliothek (Pet. ii, 173) has 
qundhiira. cf. the Arabic quribuz and Persian qupuz. See my Studies 
in Oriental Musical Instruments, p. 59. 

* It has been identified with the lute, being played with the thumb. 
Lane, Lexicon, \, 126, b 



THE DAYS OF IDOLATRY 7 

was an elegy on the death of Abel. 1 Bar Hebrseus the 
Syrian (d. 1289) tells us that the inventors of musical 
instruments were the daughters of Cain, hence the name 
for a singing-girl, which was qaina \ It will be recalled 
that the Hebrews make Jubal, the son of Lamech, " the 
father of all such as handle the kinndr and 'ugdb." 2 
The latter, as Lamak, also has a place in Arabic musical 
tradition as the "inventor" of the 'ud (lute). His son 
Tubal is credited with having introduced the tall (drum) 
and duff (tambourine), whilst his daughter Dilal is claimed 
to have been responsible for the ma'dzif (instruments 
with open strings). 3 From the same Arabic source we 
learn that the tunbur (pandore) came from the people of 
Sodom (Lut), although others say the Sabaeans. 4 At 
any rate, since both of these people were probably of 
Arab blood, the statements agree with the account of 
Julius Pollux, who attributes the instrument to the 
Arabs. 5 The Persians are allowed the nay (vertical 
flute), the surydnai (flute or reed-pipe), the diydnai 
(double reed-pipe) 6 and the jank (harp). 7 Many of 
the above instruments are depicted in Persian art re- 
mains. 8 

As with all the Semites, music played an important 
part in the mysteries of the Arab soothsayer, enchanter, 
and prophet. The jinn (genii) were evidently conjured by 
means of music, and the later notion that it was the jinn 
who prompted the verses of the poet and the melodies 
of the musician, was a survival of this belief. 9 The 
Qur'dn hands down some interesting conceptions which 

*Al-Mas'udI, i, 65. Al-Tabarl, i, 146. Mfrkhw&nd, i (i), 53. 
Al-Jundl, Risala rau$ al-masarrdt. 

Genesis, iv. 21. 

As a generic term the ma'dzif were instruments whose strings gave 
open notes like the harp, psaltery, or barbiton. 

Huth MS. in the author's possession. 
1 Julius Pollux, iv, 9, 60. 

Barbier de Meynard, the editor/ adopts the forms surndy and 
dundy. See my Studies in Oriental Musical Instruments, p. 57. 

The text has $anj. 

See Flandrin et Coste, Voyage en Perse, pi. x and xii, for musical 
instruments temp. Shapur II (309-79 A.D.), and Dalton's Treasures of 
the Oxus, 211. 

8 Musicians in the days of Islam, such as Ibrahim al-Mausill, his son 
, and Ziryab, all claimed to have been taught melodies by the jinn. 



8 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

relate to music and magic. 1 The intimate connection 
between these two is borne out by philology. In Arabic, 
the voice of the jinn is termed the 'azf, which is also the 
name for a certain musical instrument. 2 When the Jews 
likened " God's Holy Spirit " to the sounds of the kithara, 
as we find in Odes of Solomon (iv, xiv), the apparent 
symbolism seems to have its origin in primitive culture. 

What part music played in the Pagan worship of the 
Days of Idolatry we know but little. The hajj or pil- 
grimage to the various ka'bat was practised, 3 although 
Mecca was evidently the chief attraction. During the 
hajj, the pilgrims appear to have indulged in those 
primitive musical chantings which still exist in the 
tahlil and talbiyya. Perhaps we may even look for some 
sort of ritual and even hymns. 4 One fragment of the 
ritual performed during the hajj has been preserved in 
the words ashriq thablr kaima nughw, said to have been 
sung during the ifada to Mina. 5 St. Nilus tells us of the 
Arabs of the north, who chanted a hymn whilst encircling 
the sacrificial stone. 6 Noeldeke likens it to the tahlil. 
Doughty saw a stone (nusb) at Al-Ta'if in Al-Hijaz which 
was dedicated to Al-Lat the goddess. 7 It was upon such 
stones that sacrifices were offered, 8 and it is not improb- 
able that the song called the nasb, may have been con- 
nected originally with the cult. Both Imru'u'1-Qais and 
Labid, the pre-Islamic poets, speak of "maidens circling 
a pillar," which would most likely be performed in a 
dance, accompanied by music or song, as with the 
Phcenico-Cyprian maidens that the art remains have 
revealed. 9 

Yet in spite of idols and temples, the Arabs of the 

1 Suras, xxi, 79. xxxiv, 10. xxxviii, 17-18. Kashf al-mahjub, 
402-3. Al-Tabarl (Zotenberg Edit.), i, 426. 

'Azfmi 'zaf. Lane, Lexicon. See Bibliotheca Geographorum 
Arabicorum, vi, 68 (text). 

Syed Ahmed Khan, Manners and Customs of the Pre-Islamic 
Arabians, 15. 

4 Nicholson, Lit. Hist, of the Arabs, 73. Encyclopedia of Religion 
and Ethics, x, 883. 

Encyclopedia of Islam, ii, 200. 
Migne, Pat. Lot., Ixxi, 612. 

7 Doughty, Travels in Arabia Deserta, ii, 511. 

Lyall, Ancient Arabian Poetry, xxviii. 

Rawlinson, History of Phoenicia, 187. 



THE DAYS OF IDOLATRY 9 

jdhiliyya interested themselves but little in religion of 
any sort. * The badawi view of life, which was thoroughly 
secular, and quite hedonistic, dominated even the cities 
and towns. To the badawi Arab, " love, wine, gambling, 
hunting, the pleasures of song and romance, the brief, 
pointed and elegant expression of wit and wisdom," 
alone came to be the affairs that mattered. " These 
things he knew to be good. Beyond them he only saw 
the grave." 2 We see these thoughts in a poem by Sulmi 
ibn Rabl'a, who lived in the century before Islam. 
It is given in the Hamdsa. The poet tells us how death 
comes to all and sundry, but meanwhile, there are 
" life's joys," and among them the pleasure of listening 
to the music of the mizhar (lute). 

Everywhere the sha'ir or poet-soothsayer possessed 
high social prestige, alike at the courts of Al-Hira and 
Ghassan, the fair at 'Uka?, and the badawi encampment. 3 
The hijd or satire (originally an incantation) was held 
in the utmost veneration. It was delivered in rhymed 
prose called s0/, or else in unrhymed poetry known as 
rajaz. The shd'ir was doubtless often as much a musician 
as a poet, although it would seem that he sometimes 
engaged a musician (mughann, mughanni) to chant his 
verses for him, in the same way as he would employ 
a reciter (rdwi) to recite them. This idea persisted even 
unto the days of Islam, when we find a poet like A'sha 
Hamdan and a musician like Ahmad al-Nasibi in this 
kind of partnership. 4 

How highly the shd'ir was esteemed we have evidence 
from the Muzhir of Al-SuyutI 6 : 

" When there appeared a poet in a family of the 
Arabs, the other tribes round about would gather 
together to that family and wish them joy in their 
good luck. Feasts would be got ready, the women 

1 Lyall, op. cit., xxvii. Nicholson, op. cit., 135. 

Nicholson, op. cit., 136. 

1 That a number of kings and chiefs during the jdhiliyya were poets 
and musicians is significant. 

Aghanl, v, 162. 

Al-SuyutI, Muzhir, ii, 236. The translation is from Lyall's Ancient 
Arabian Poetry, xvii. See Sale's Koran, 20, 



io A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

of the tribes would join together in bands, playing 
upon their lutes (mazdhir, sing, mizhar), as they were 
wont to do at bridals ... for a poet was a defence 
to the honour of them all, a weapon to ward off insult 
from their good name, and a means of perpetuating 
their glorious deeds and of establishing their fame for 
ever." 

There was also the female musician (mughanniya), 
who played no inconsiderable part in the musical and 
literary life. The harim was unknown, and women appear 
to have enjoyed almost as much liberty as men. 1 It 
was the women of the tribes who joined in the music of 
the family or tribal festivities with their instruments, 
a custom which continued down to the time of Muhammad, 
whose nuptials with Khadija were " celebrated with great 
festivity, mirth, music, and dancing." At Uhud (625) 
the journey of the Quraish was enlivened by the women 
led by Hind bint 'Utba singing war songs and laments 
for the slain at Badr, and playing their tambourines 
(dufuf, sing, duff).* At the onset to battle, they were 
still singing and playing. 3 What the women generally 
excelled in was the marthiya or lament, and the nauh 
or elegy. 4 

Side by side with these matrons we find a class known 
as the qaindt or qiydn (sing, qaina). These were the 
singing-girls, who were invariably found in the house- 
hold of every Arab of social standing. Singing-girls 
appear in the old story of the destruction of the people 
of 'Ad as told by Al-Tabari and Al-Mas'udi. 5 The people 
of 'Ad are said to have belonged to South Arabia, 6 and 
when a lengthy drought afflicted this land, suppliants were 
sent to the temple at Makuraba (Mecca) to beseech 
divine aid for rain. At Makuraba the deputation was 
received by the amir of the Banu 'Amallq, Mu'awiya 

1 Lyall, op. cit. t xxxi. 

Caussin de Perceval, Hist. Arabes, Hi, 91. 

Ibid., Hi, 99. Muir, Mohammad, 259. 

Mufcuftfaliyyat, ii, 215. Aghanl, xix, 87, 

Al-f abarl, i, 231. Al-Mas'fidI, Hi, 296-7, and Vabrigi des Mer- 
veilles, 134. 

Encyclopedia of Islam, i, 121. 



THE DAYS OF IDOLATRY n 

ibn Bakr, who entertained them suitably, especially with 
the music of his two famous singing-girls known as the 
jarddatdn (the two grasshoppers). These pleasantries 
continued for a month, and meanwhile the suppliants 
were neglecting their mission. Finally, supplications 
were begun, but the deity was so wroth with the people 
of 'Ad on account of their sins, that a storm cloud was 
sent over the land which, bursting, destroyed the whole 
race. 1 At a period just prior to the dawn of Islam, a 
Quraish chief, 'Abdallah ibn Jud'an, possessed two 
singing-girls called the jarddatdn of 'Ad, and while he had 
them they were such an attraction at Mecca that he was 
compelled to keep an " open house." He then presented 
them to his friend Umayya ibn Abfl-Salt (d. 630), the 
Pagan poet of Mecca. 2 

How much the singing-girls had become an integral 
part of social life may be seen in the early struggles of 
Muhammad himself. When the Meccans were marching 
to Badr in 624, they took with them " all the instruments 
and appurtenances of pleasure, and singing-girls ; the 
latter performing on musical instruments, singing near 
every water, where a halt was made, and lengthening 
their tongues with reproaches against the professors of 
Islam/' 3 When Muhammad was known to be approach- 
ing, the Meccan chief was counselled to retire rather than 
risk a battle, but he replied : " No. I will not return 
to Mecca until we have refreshed ourselves at Badr, 
and spent three days in feasting and listening to the 
singing and playing of the singing-girls/' 4 

At the court of the Ghassanid monarch, Jabala ibn 
al-Aiham (ca. 623-37), ten or more of these singing- 

1 The jarddatdn passed into proverb. See Freytag, A rabum Proverbia. 
iii, 49. xxiii, 517. 

Aghdni, viii, 3. 
Mlrkhwand, n (i), 291. 

* Al-Tabarl, i, 1307. The singing-girl is sometimes called a karlna. 
(Iqd al-farld, iii, 186. Al-Mas'udI, vni, 419. Al-TibrlzI, 83). Ddjina 
or mudjina was also given her, and the name has particular interest 
from a point of view of etymology. The words are derived from the 
verbal root dajana =- " to be cloudy." (Cf. Mufaggaliyydt, ii, 89, 221.) 
It was customary for the ddjina to sing and play when the skies were 
overcast so as to conjure rain. (See my Influence of Music ; From 
Arabic Sources, 9.) One of the jarddatdn was named Tham&d ( pre- 
server of water). Cf. the name of the tribe Thamud, 



12 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

girls were in evidence. 1 Hassan ibn Thabit (ca. 563-683) 
says 2 : 

" I saw ten singing-girls, five of them Byzantines, 
singing the songs of their country to the accompaniment 
of the barbat (lute or barbiton), and five others from 
Al-HIra, who had been given to King Jabala by 
lyas ibn Qabisa, singing the songs of their country. 
Arab singers also came from Mecca and elsewhere 
for his [Jabala's] pleasure." 

At Al-HIra, 3 and at the Persian court, 4 we see these 
singing-girls, and even with the badawi Arabs. It was the 
antiphonal chanting of the singing-girls (ddjindt) that 
Bishr ibn 'Amr praised. 5 One of the singing-girls of this 
old pre-Islamic poet, who was named Huraira, led the 
more famous ppet-minstrel Al-A'sha Maimun ibn Qais 
to declare his love. 6 The valiant poet-shaikh of the 
Banu'l-Harith, 'Abd Yaghuth ibn Waqqas (d. ca. 612), 
could not forget the delights of the singing-girls even in 
his death-song. 7 

Singing-girls were also attached to the taverns for the 
entertainment of visitors. Al-A'sha Maimun ibn Qais 
sings of the bitter-sweet joys of the tavern, not merely 
of the " flowing bowl/' but of the alluring jank (harp) 
and the refrain (tarjt') of the singing-girl. 8 Tarafa, 9 
Labid, 10 and 'Abd al-Masih ibn 'Asala, 11 all praised the 
good-cheer of the tavern singing-girl. 12 

Lyall was of opinion that these singing-girls " were all 
foreigners, either Persians or Greeks from Syria ; they 
sang, however, at any rate sometimes, poems in Arabic, 
though probably to foreign airs." 13 Von Kremer goes 
further and says : "It is clear beyond doubt that these 
female singers originally sang in their own tongue : 

1 Professor Nicholson points out that this reference really belongs 
to an earlier period. 

1 Aghanl, xvi, 15. Mufa4$aliyyat, xxx. 4 Ibid., Ixxii, xxvi. 

I Ibid., Ixxi. Aghanl, viii, 79. Muja^^aliyyo^t, xxx. 

Al-TibrfzI, 146. The text has $anj, a word sometimes used instead 
of jank to represent the Persian chang. 

Mu'allaqdt. 10 Al-Tibrlz!, 73. " Mufa$$aliyyat, Ixxii. 

II For the particular character of these singing girls see Al-Tirmidhl, 
ii 33- Taj al-'arus, sub " Zammar. 

Lyall, op. tit., xxvi, 87. Cf. Clouston, Arabian Poetry . . . 377. 



THE DAYS OF IDOLATRY 13 

Greek or Persian and not Arabic. . . . Tuwais is the first 
who sang in Arabic with the accompaniment of the hand 
drum." I do not know of any authority for these 
statements. That all the singing-girls were " foreigners " 
can scarcely be true, unless we are to discredit the great 
Kitab al-aghani and the poets of the jdhiliyya, who 
most certainly tell us about Arab singing-girls, who sang 
in their native tongue. 1 The qaina who sang the verses 
of Al-Nabigha, and made the poet realize for the first time 
that his poetry contained faulty rhymes (iqwa') t must 
have spoken Arabic well, and was assuredly an Arab 
by education. 2 Indeed, one can scarcely imagine that 
the Arabs would have listened for one moment to Arabic 
poetry from the mouth of a " foreigner," who could 
rarely have been able to apportion the vocalic and con- 
sonantal values which are inseparable from the poetic 
art, especially when sung. That Tuwais was the first to 
sing in Arabic, is certainly not the case. What has been 
claimed for him in this respect by Arab historians is 
something quite different, as we shall see later. 

" Before Islam/' says Perron, " music was little else 
than unpretentious psalming, 3 varied and embroidered 
by the singer, male or female, according to the taste, 
emotion, or effect desired. These variations, or rather 
caprices, were prolonged interminably on a syllable, 
word or hemistich, in such a way that the singing of a 
cantilena of two or three verses might be prolonged for 
hours. . . . The timbre of the voice, its mobility and 
vibrations, the feeling which made it sound or quaver, 
determined the merit of the singer." 4 Everyone sang in 
unison or octave, as harmony in our acceptation of the 
term in music, was quite unknown. The only " har- 
mony," if such it could be called, was that supplied by 
the various instruments of percussion such as the fabl 
(drum), duff (tambourine), or qadib (wand), and the 

1 Mufa<j,<j,aUyyat t xv. 

Aghdnl, ix, 164. For the importance of correct pronunciation in 
the song see also Aghdnl, v, 57. 

1 Tar annum was the Arabic word for this. Ibn Khaldun says that 
the young men of the jdhiliyya passed their idle hours away by in- 
dulging in this " psalming." 

4 Perron, Femmes arabes avant Vlslamisme. 



14 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

figuration of the melody by means of ornaments in the 
shape of trills or turns which were called zawd'id. 

Bisbr ibn 'Amr tells us about a skilful songstress 
(ddjina) who " sang antiphonally with another like her, 
and struck the resounding lute." 1 Tarafa, describing 
a scene " where men tap the wine skins," speaks of the 
" low note " upon which the song began. Again we are 
told in a poem by 'Abda ibn al-Tablb that " the singer 
prolonged the final vowels with a high trill (twin) and 
clearly enunciated the syllables (tariff) giving each its 
due measure and value." 2 

Arab historians like to expatiate upon the origin of the 
song. The first song is claimed to have been the hudd' 
or caravan song, and its origin is traced to Mu^ar ibn 
Nizar ibn Ma* add, 3 who is the Almodad of the Old 
Testament.* It was in the rajaz metre, a measure said 
to correspond with the lifting and lowering of the camel's 
feet. 6 From the hudd 1 there issued the nasb, which is 
expressly stated to be no more than an improved hudd 9 . 
With the folk, the hudd\ sometimes called the rakbanf, was 
the "muse populaire." 6 Being in the simple rajaz 
metre it was pre-eminently suitable for the extemporane- 
ous song known as the ghind* murtajal, which we frequently 
read of among the earlier untutored minstrels, who used 
a qadib or wand to mark the measure of the song. The 
later Al-Asma'I objected to this type of music, probably 
because it savoured of Paganism. 

In Al-Hijaz, which was not so advanced musically as 
either Al-HIra or Ghassan perhaps, the na$b and the nauh 
were the only types of songs practised until the close of 
the sixth century or beginning of the seventh, when the 
poet-minstrel Al-Nadr ibn al-Harith (d. 624) introduced 
several innovations from Al-Hira, and among them the 

1 Mufa<j,$aliyyat, Ixxi. 
1 Ibid., xxvi, p. 101. 

Al-Mas'udI, viii, 92. Ibn Khaldun, ii, 359. The story runs that 
Mudar fell from his camel and fractured his hand. In his pain he 
cried out : " Yd yadah, yaddh " (" O my hand "), which gave birth 
to the rajaz metre. 

i Chronicles, i, 20. 

See my Influence of Music ; From Arabic Sources, 9. 

Encyclopaedia of Islam, i, 466. 



THE DAYS OF IDOLATRY 15 

more advanced song (ghind*), which supplanted the 
na$b, and the wooden-bellied 'ud, which seemingly took 
the place of the skin-bellied mizhar. 1 Rhythm $qd') t 
such as we read of in the sindd and hazaj types of song 
in the late seventh century, appears not to have been 
practised in these days, 2 for although we are told that the 
hudff and the nab (by inference) were made up of 
measured melodies (alhdn mauzuna)* the musical measure 
was evidently determined by the prosodical feet of the 
verse, and was not independent of the verse metre as 
was the later rhythm called iqd*. 

In Al-Yaman there were two kinds of song practised, 
the himyan and the hanaff, the latter being considered 
the better. 4 Here we are clearly introduced to a Pre- 
Islamic type in the himyari, i.e., the music of the Himyar- 
ites, and a more recent type, the hanafi. There is a pass- 
age in the Qur'dn (liii, 61), which is claimed to refer 
to pre-Islamic music. The passage runs " Ye laugh 
and do not weep and ye are sdmidun/' Abu 1 !-' Abbas 
'Abdallah ibn al-' Abbas ibn al-Muttalib (d. 688) said that 
the sdmidun were those who indulged in the singing of 
the Himyarites. 5 

In the Days of Idolatry we do not find the mention of 
the tunbur (pandore), although it most certainly existed. 
Al-Farabi (d. 950) tells us that the tunbur al-baghdddi 
or tunbur al-mizdm of his day was fretted in accordance 
with a pre-Islamic scale which was arrived at by dividing 
a string into forty parts. 6 The lute was quite common 
it would seem. It was known variously as the mizhar, 
kirdn, barbat, muwattar, and 'ud. 1 The earlier instru- 
ment was a skin-bellied contrivance, and this we imagine 
to have been the mizhar. 8 The kirdn t which is stated to 
have been not absolutely identical with the 'ud, 9 may 

AI-Mas'udI, viii, 93-94- ' 'Iqd al-farid, iii, 186. 

Al-Ghazall, Ihya 'ulum al-dln t in J.R.A.S. (1901), p. 217. 

Al-Mas'udI, viii, 93. Al-GhazSlI, loc. eft. 

Land, Recherches, 140-49. Kosegarten, Lib. Cant., 89. Mafatfy 
al-'ul&m, 237. 

' 'Iqd al-farld, iii, 186. Lane, Lexicon, p. 1262. 

The verbal root zahara - " to shine brightly " produces mixhar - 
" a thing that brightens." 

Madrid MS., No. 603. Kitab al-imta*. 



16 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

have been a name derived through Syriac-Hebrew 
sources, being a metathesis of kindr or kinndr ( = Hebrew 
kinnor, Nabataean kinord). 1 Barbat was the Persian 
name apparently for the wooden-bellied lute adopted 
by the Arabs as the 'tid (= wood). 2 Muwattar means 
literally " an instrument of strings/' but it is identified 
by the old Arabic lexicographers with the lute, and it 
would seem that it was played with the thumb. 3 Finally, 
there were the jank (= Persian chang), also called the 
anj, which was a harp, the mi'zafa, which may have been 
a kind of psaltery, 4 and the murabba', most probably 
the flat-chested quadrangular guitar. 6 So far the stringed 
instruments. 

Among wind instruments and the percussion group 
there are not many to record. The term mizmdr stood 
for any wood- wind instrument in general, although in 
particular it was used for a reed-pipe. 6 The qussdba 
(= qasaba) was the vertical flute. 7 It was this long type 
which gave the Greeks the prompting for a proverb. 8 
The Qur'dn mentions the sur and ndqur as the instru- 
ments upon which " the last trump " will sound. 9 The 
tdbl (drum) and duff (tambourine), as well as the more 
primitive qadib (wand), were the instruments for deter- 
mining the measure. Sunuj (sing, sinj) or metal cas- 
tanets and jaldjil (sing, juljul) or sonnettes were also 
favoured. 10 Cymbals were used in battle as Clement of 

1 Cf. Forbes, Diet, of the Hindustani Language, sub " karan." 

Persian lexicographers derive the word from bar ( = " breast ") 
and bat ( = " duck "), because its shape was like the breast of a duck. 
The Greeks borrowed both word and instrument in the fiapptTos. 
That the barbat and 'ud were synonymous in the nth century is 
apparent from the Shifa of Ibn Sina (d. 1037). The barbat had four 
strings in the time of Khusrau Parwiz (yth cent.) if we are to 'accept the 
authority of Khalid al-Fayyad (d. ca. 718). J.R.A.S. (1899), p. 59. 

' Lane, Lexicon, sub al. 

4 See ante pp. 4, 7, and my Studies in Oriental Musical Instruments 
P- 7-8. 

See the instrument depicted in the frescoes of the Qusair 'Amra 
palace. Kusejr 'Amra, ii, pi. 34. (Published by the Kais. Akad. der 
Wissenschaflen, Vienna, 1907.) 

Aghanl, ii, 175. The mizmdr and duff were the martial instruments 
of the tribes. 

7 Mufa$4aliyyat, xvii. 

1 Suidas, Lexicon, sub 'Apdflios. 

Suras, vi, 73. Ixxiv, 8. 
10 Lane, Lexicon. 



THE DAYS OF IDOLATRY 17 

Alexandria tells us, while jalajil were part of the impedi- 
menta of dancers. 

During the Days of Ignorance as to-day 1 music was to 
be found in the private, public, and religious life of the 
Arabs. Just as they toiled for their Assyrian taskmasters 
in ancient times to the joy of their songs, 2 so the Arabs 
of Al-Medina sang as they dug the fosse around the 
city when the Meccans threatened them. 3 Just as the 
Israelites sang their " Well Song," 4 so did the fifth century 
Arabs. 5 Just as the ancients entered battle to music, 6 
so did the Arabs of the jdhiliyya. 1 Just as Sargon sang 
of the exploits of his Assyrian warriors, so did the fourth- 
century Arabs recount their victory over the Romans 
in song. 8 Just as the temples of Ishtar and Yahweh 
resounded with music and song, so possibly did the 
temples and shrines of the Arabs. 9 When the Hebrews 
said, " A concert of music at a banquet of wine is as a 
signet of carbuncle set in gold/' 10 the Arabs were not far 
behind when their poet, 'Abda ibn al-Tabib, who lived 
during the jdhiliyya, spoke of music at a festive gathering 
as being like " painters' work set off with gold." 11 If 
the harvesters of Israel had their songs, so had the Arab 
workers in the palm-tree oases. 12 Music and song were 
with the Arabs from the lullaby at the cradle 13 to the 
elegy at the bier. 14 

111 

Of the musicians of the Days of Idolatry but few names 
have been preserved for us. We are told, however, 
that "the singers in the Days of Idolatry were many/' 15 
and one of the writers mentioned in the Fihrist (tenth 
century) wrote a Kitdb al-aghdm 'old huruf which con- 

1 Parisot, Musique Orientate, 5. 

1 Schrader, Keil Bibl., ii, 234. 

1 Ibn Sa'd, ii/i, 50. Numbers, xxi, 17. 

Pat. Lat. Ixxi, 612 Ezekiel, xxxiii, 3. Hamasa, 254. 

Sozomen, Hist. Eccles., vi, 38. 

Nicholson, Lit. Hist, of the Arabs, 73. 

I Ecclesiasticus, xxxii, 5-6. 

II Mufatfdaliyyat, xxvi. 

" Encyclopedia of Islam, i, 402. 

"'Iqd al-farld t iii, 176. " Aghanl, xix, 87. 

* Huth MS. In the author's possession. 



i8 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

tained the names of the male and female singers in the 
Days of Idolatry as well as in the Days of Islam. 1 It 
seems highly probable, as Brockelmann says, that the 
poems of the jahiliyya were meant to be chanted to a 
simple musical accompaniment. 2 Indeed the lahn 
(melody) to which shi'r (verse) was set was a survival 
of the more primitive chanting (talhin) of the shd'ir 
when he was a soothsayer pure and simple. It is signi- 
ficant that the more primitive meanings of lahan and 
shi'r are " intelligence " and " knowledge." In the 
days that we are concerned with it was perhaps the fact 
that a poet had a good voice that soon marked him out 
as being the superior of another. 

'Adi ibn al-Rabf a (d. ca. 495), the famous poet of the 
Banu Taghlib, is said to have been surnamed Muhalhil 
on account of his voice. 3 Some writers, however, 
attribute other promptings for this name. 4 

'Alqama ibn 'Abda (sixth century) was one of the 
poets sometimes included in the Mu'allaqdt. That he 
was a singer is evident from a statement made by Al- 
Farabi, who tells us 'Alqama was refused a hearing by 
the Ghassanid king Al-Harith ibn Abi Shamir (529-69) 
until he had melodized (lahhana) his verse and sung 
(ghanna) it to him. 5 

Al-A'sha Maimun ibn Qais (d. ca. 629) belonged to 
Al-Yamama, although he had travelled the whole Penin- 
sula " harp in hand, 11 as Professor Nicholson says, singing 
the wonderful verses that gave him a place in the 
Mu'allaqdt. He was called " the sanndjat al-arab," 
i.e., " the sanjist of the Arabs. 1 ' It is on this account 
that it has been presumed that he played the harp 
(anj = jank),* although it is quite likely that the name 
meant " the measurer [in poetry] of the Arabs," having 
the clashing idea of the cymbals (sinjdn) in mind. 7 

Al-Na<Jr ibn al-Harith (d. 624), a descendant of the 

1 Fihrist, 145. Encyclopedia of Islam, i, 403. 

Caussin de Perceval, Hist. Arabes, ii, 280. 
*Huart, Arab. Lit., 12. J.R.A.S. (1925), 422. 

Al-FarabI, Leyden MS., Or. 651, fol. 7. Kosegarten, Lib. Can*., 
200. 

Nicholson, Lit. Hist, of the Arabs, 123. Aghanl (Sas! Edit.), i, 146. 
1 See below p. 79. 



THE DAYS OF IDOLATRY 19 

famous Qusaiy and a cousin of the Prophet Muhammad, 
was certainly one of the poet-minstrels of the jdhiliyya. 
He became one of the Prophet's rivals in a professional 
as well as in a political sense, 1 since they both desired the 
ear of the public, the one with " song and story," and 
the other with " Revelations." It was Al-NacJr whom 
the Prophet pilloried in the Qur'dn (xxxi, 5-6). At the 
Arab court of A]-Hira, Al-Nadr had learned to play the 
new type of lute called the 'ud, which apparently super- 
seded the old mizhar and its congeners, 2 as well as to sing 
the more artistic ghind', which ousted the nab. These 
innovations he introduced into Mecca. 3 

Outside of those in personal contact with Muhammad 
after the Hijra, who will be mentioned later, only one 
other male musician can be traced, and that is Malik 
ibn Jubair al-Mughanni, who formed one of the deputa- 
tion of the Banu Tai' to the Prophet in the year 630.* 

Among the songstresses many names have been 
preserved. The legendary period supplies four at least. 
The famous jarddatdn of the Banu 'Ad were named 
Qu'ad and Thamad. 6 Hazila and 'Afira were singing- 
girls of the Banu Jadis, the tribe which utterly destroyed 
the Banu Tasm. 8 

The mother of the celebrated poet Hatim al-Ta'I was 
probably a musician, and Al-Khansa the exquisite elegaist 
sang her laments (mardthi) to music. 7 Hind bint 
'Utba, a representative matron of the Arabs of the 
jdhiliyya, was both a poet and musician. Bint 'Afzar 
was a songstress who kept or was employed at a house of 
entertainment where the renowned Al-Harith ibn Zalim 
and Khalid ibn Ja'far met. 8 Huraira and Khulaida were 
singing-girls of Bishr ibn 'Amr a grandee of Al-Hirainthe 
days of Al-Nu'man III (d. ca. 602).* It was in praise of 
the first of these that Al-A'sha Maimun ibn Qais sang. 10 

1 Huart, op. cit., 32. See ante p. 15. * Al-Mas'udf, viii, 93-4. 
4 Aghanl, xvi, 48, xxi, 191. Al-Tabarl calls him Malik ibn 'Abdallah 
ibn Khaibarl. See also Hajiz ibn 'Awf al-Azdl in the Aghdnl. 

Al-Mas'udI, iii, 296. Ibn Badrun, 53. Aghanl, x, 48. 

Al-Mas'udI, iii, 29. Ibn Badrun, 65. ' Aghanl , xiii, 140. 

Aghanl, x, 18. A wife of Hatim al-JS,'! was named Mawiya bint 
'Afzar. 

Agh&nl, viii, 79. 10 See ante p. 12. 



CHAPTER II 
ISLAM AND MUSIC 

" To listen to music is to transgress the law : To make music is to 
transgress religion : To take pleasure in music is to transgress the 
faith and renders you an infidel." 

D'Ohsson, Tableau general de VEmpire Othoman, ii, 188. 

ABOUT the year 571 a child was born at Mecca who was 
destined to change the entire fortunes of Arabia and the 
Arabs. This was Muhammad " the Prophet of Allah." 
He belonged to the famous tribe of the Quraish, which 
had been masters of Mecca since the fifth century, and 
he was a grandson of one of its most eminent shaikhs, 
'Abd al-Muttalib, himself the great-grandson of the 
famous Qusaiy, who created the hegemony of the Quraish 
in Mecca. 1 When nearly forty years of age (610), 
Muhammad began to receive his " Revelations," which 
later became the foundation of the Qur'dn. 

The Quraish, however, would have none of these 
" Revelations " and vigorously opposed Muhammad. 
At first they thought him a shffir (poet-soothsayer) 
or a kdhin (magician), for, indeed, his "Revelations" 
showed the style of the saj or rhymed prose, such as the 

1 Quaiy. 

'Abd Manaf. 

'Abd Shams. Hashim. 

Umayya. 'Abd al-Muttalib. 



Al-' Abbas 'Abdallah. Abu 



"- " Talib. 



THE UMAYYADS. 



MUHAMMAD. 



THE 'ABBASIDS. 
20 



ISLAM AND MUSIC 21 

shcVir used. He was in fact called a sha'ir majnun, 
i.e., a poet-soothsayer possessed of the jinn (genii), and 
was looked upon as an ordinary augur. 1 The Prophet 
indignantly repudiated the title of soothsayer in Sura 
Ixix, although one can scarcely read Suras cxiii and cxiv 
without feeling that they are no more than what could 
be expected from a kahin, whilst Sura cxi is a typical 
hij a or curse of a soothsayer. 2 

In the course of time Muhammad's teaching bore fruit, 
and although his disciples were few, yet they included 
some of the most influential men of the Quraish. Indeed, 
his influence at Mecca became so commanding that the 
Umayya branch of the Quraish actually proscribed him, 
and later (622) he was compelled to seek refuge in the 
city of Yathrib. This was the " Year of the Hijra 
(migration), 11 and Muhammad gave to his city of refuge 
the name of Al-Medina (" The City "), whilst its two 
tribes which formed the bulk of the population, the 
Banu'1-Aws and Banu'l-Khazraj , had the title of Al-Ansdr 
(" The Helpers ") bestowed on them. With the armed 
forces of Al-Medina at his back, Muhammad unsheathed 
the sword of Islam against the unbelievers. 

Muhammad died in 632, but he had witnessed the 
triumph of his mission in Arabia even as far afield as 
Al-Bahrain the preaching of Islam. Al-Hijaz was now 
the centre of attraction for the peninsula. The ancient 
renown of Al-Yaman, the culture of Al-'Iraq, the puissance 
of Ghassan, counted for naught in the face of the new 
spirit cradled in Al-Hijaz, which, within a century, 
was to hold the minds of all peoples from the confines 
of China and the banks of the Indus to the shores of 
Morocco and the peaks of the Pyrenees. 

1 Hirschfeld, New Researches into the Composition and Exegesis of 
the Qoran, 10. 

* Two of these Suras are " charms " against bewitchery and jinn 
(genii), and to this very day they are engraved on amulets for this 
purpose. There is little difference between these Suras and the charms 
or denunciations of the ancient Babylonian-Assyrian ashshipu. 



22 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

1 

One of the most perplexing points in Islam is its 
attitude towards music, and for centuries its legists have 
argued the question whether listening to music (al- 
samd 1 ) is lawful or not. It is not easy to comprehend how 
the question arose, seeing that there is not a word of 
direct censure against music in the Qur'dn, and above all, 
in face of the fact that music was almost an indispensable 
item in the social life of the Arabs. Where then did the 
" authority " come from for this opposition to music ? 
The censure of " wine, woman, and song " was certainly 
nothing new to Semitic peoples, for the Hebrews, and 
apparently the Phoenicians also, had their puritans who 
cried out against these things. 1 Something of this 
spirit seems to have pervaded even Pagan Arabia, and 
the heathen poet Umayya ibn Abil-Salt was quite a 
puritan in some respects, although he never breathed 
a word against music. 

Orientalists are divided on the question of the origin 
of the Islamic censure of " listening to music." One 
group attributes it directly to the Prophet Muhammad 
himself, whilst the other holds that it was manufactured 
by the theologians of the 'Abbasid era, who were jealous 
of the inordinate attention paid to music and musicians. 
At first sight it would appear to be an easy matter to 
settle this question by an appeal to the Qur'dn and the 
ffadith. Yet the former is interpreted according to the 
particular view of the exegete, whilst the latter has 
definite statements which support both sides. 

It is claimed by Muslim exegetes that the verse (Sura, 
xxxv, i), which says, " He increases in His creatures 
that which he wills," refers to the " Beautiful Voice." 2 
Again they say that where the text (Sura, xxxi, 18) 
says, " Verily, the worse liked of voices is the voice of 
the ass," we have a negative praise of the " Beautiful 
Voice." 3 Then it is argued from Sura, vii, 30, that singing 

1 Isaiah, v, 12 Amos, vi, 5. xxiii, 15, 16. Jesus ben Sirach says : 
" Use not much the company of a woman that is a singer." Ecclus., 
ix, 4. 

This was the view of Al-Zuhrl. Cf. Al-BaidawI, ii, 148. 

'Iqd al-farld, iii, 177. Al-Ghazall, op. cit. t 209. 



ISLAM AND MUSIC 23 

is allowable since it is laid down, " Say, who hath for- 
bidden the adornment of Allah which he hath provided 
for His creatures/' 1 On the other hand, the objectors 
aver that singing is " unlawful " because it employs 
poetry, and they point to the Prophet's denunciation 
of poets in Sura, xxxi, 5-6, where he says, "There is 
one who purchases a ludicrous story, that he may seduce 
men from the way of Allah, without knowledge, and may 
laugh the same to scorn : these shall suffer a shameful 
punishment." This anathema was hurled . directly at 
the poet-minstrel Al-Nadr ibn al-Harith, whose Pagan 
song and story were being more readily listened to at 
first than were the " Revelations " of the Prophet 
Muhammad. Indeed, several of the early Muslims 
considered that the " ludicrous story " meant " singing," 
and among them Abu 'Abd al-Rahman ibn Mas'ud 
(d. 653), Ibrahim ibn Yazid al-Nakha'i (d. 715), and 
Abu Sa'id al-Hasan al-Basri (d. 728). Then again, we 
see Muhammad condemning the poet in Sura, xxvi, 
224-26, saying, " And the poets do those follow who go 
astray. Dost thou not see that they wander distraught 
in every vale ? " Yet this, too, was probably not 
directed against poetry as such, but simply against the 
poet who in the eyes of the Prophet was the incarnation 
of Pagan ideals, and who, moreover, was pouring out 
satires and invective against him. 2 There can be little 
doubt but that Muhammad feared the poets and minstrels, 
and stopped at nothing to accomplish their discredit 
and even destruction, as we know in the case of Ka'b 
ibn al-Ashraf, Ka'b ibn Zuhair, and Al-Nadr ibn al- 
Harith. All that savoured of the old religion was treated 
contumeliously by Muhammad. Note how scornful he is 
of whistling and hand-clapping in Sura, viii, 35. 3 On 
the whole, however, it was not in the Qur'an that the 
contemners of music found any real basis for their 

Al-GhazalI, op. cit., 214. 

Muhammad himself employed an official poet in Hassan ibn Thabit 
to denounce his enemies. " Pour out the raid against them," he says 
to Hassan, " for by Allah, your poetry is more potent than the falling 
of arrows in the darkness of dawn." 'Iqd al-farld, iii, 178. 

That is why whistling is still considered a prompting of the Devil 
by the Arabs. 



24 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

strictures, and they were compelled therefore to turn 
to the only other " authority'', the Hadith. 

Hadith was the name given to a saying or story of 
Muhammad which acquired " the force of law and some 
of the authority of inspiration/' 1 and it was looked upon as 
second only to the Qur'dn. Which Hadith is to be impli- 
citly accepted, which is only a partial truth, and which 
is to be totally rejected, is determined by rules drawn up 
by Muslim legists, which cannot be dealt with here. 
Suffice it to say that no Hadith can be accepted that is at 
variance with the Qur'dn. Of the " traditions " which 
deal with the question of " listening to music " there are 
many, and first of all we may consider those which con- 
sider it " unlawful." 

'A'isha the wife of the Prophet has handed down a 
tradition that Muhammad once said, " Verily, Allah 
hath made the singing-girl (qaina) unlawful, and the 
selling of her and her price and teaching her." Al- 
Ghazali says that this Hadith only refers to the singing- 
girl of the taverns. 2 A tradition of Jabir ibn ' Abdallah 
makes the Prophet say, " Iblis (Satan) was the first who 
wailed and the first who sang." Another Hadith from 
Abu Umama runs, " No one lifts up his voice in singing, 
but Allah sends to him two devils to his shoulders, 
beating with their heels on his breast until he refrains." 3 
Muhammad is also credited with having said, " Music 
and singing cause hypocrisy to grow in the heart as 
water makes corn grow," 4 whilst others attribute the 
origin of this Hadith to Ibn Mas'ud. 5 

In the Sahih of Al-Tirmidhi (d. 892), the Prophet is 
said to have cursed both singing and the singer, 6 although 
the truth of this Hadith has been questioned. 7 In another 
tradition the singing-girls and stringed instruments 
(ma'dzif) are given as signs of the end of the world. 8 

1 Nicholson, Lit. Hist, of the Arabs, 144. 

Al-Ghazali, op. cit., 244-5. 
Ibid., 246. 

Mishkdt al-ma$ablh, ii, 425. 
Al-Ghazall, op. cit., 248. 

Al-Tirmidh!,i, 2^1. 

7 Lammens, Melanges de la Facultt Orientate (Beyrouth), iii, 233. 

Al-Tirmidhi, ii, 33. 



ISLAM AND MUSIC 25 

Musical instruments are declared to be among the most 
powerful means by which the devil seduces men. An 
instrument of music is the devil's mu'adhdhin (caller 
to prayer) serving to call man to the devil's worship. 1 

The legists even brought the testimony of the " Com- 
panions of the Prophet " and other illustrious men of 
Islam against " listening to music." 'Abdallah ibn 
'Umar is said to have heard a pilgrim singing and rebuked 
him saying, " I do not hear Allah from you." This same 
worthy, hearing the playing of a mizmdr (reed-pipe), 
stopped his ears, saying, " Thus I saw the Apostle of 
Allah do." 2 Singing was as bad as lying, for 'Uthman 
said, "I have not sung and I have not lied." 3 Other 
contemners quote the Prophet's rebuke to Shirin, the 
singing-girl of Hassan ibn Thabit, whom he forbade to 
sing ; and 'Umar's flogging the " Companions " who 
used to listen to music ; and 'All's finding fault with 
Mu'awiya for keeping singing-girls ; and his not allowing 
Al-Hasan to look at the Abyssinian women who used to 
sing. 4 

The traditions in favour of " listening to music " are 
however almost as weighty, although not as numerous, 
as those against it. There are two which attribute to 
Muhammad the following sayings : " Allah has not sent 
a Prophet except with a Beautiful Voice," and, " Allah 
listens more intently to a man with a Beautiful Voice 
reading the Qur'an than does a master of a singing-girl 
to her singing. 5 It is related of Anas ibn Malik (d. 715) 
that Muhammad " used to make him sing the huda' 
(caravan song) when travelling, and that Anjusha used 
to sing it for the women and Al-Bara ibn Malik (the brother 
of Anas) for the men. 6 Al-Ghazali testifies that the 
hudd* " did not cease to be one of the customs of the 
Arabs in the time of the Apostle of Allah, and in the time 
of the ' Companions/ and that it is nothing but poems 

x Lane, Arabian Nights, i, 200. 

Al-Ghazall, op. cit. t 248. Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., lii, 521. 

8 Lisdn al-'arab, s.v. 

4 Kaslif al-mahjub, 411. 

Al-Chazall, 'op. cit. t 209. 

Ibid., 21 7. 



26 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

equipped with agreeable sounds (sawdt tayyiba) and 
measured melodies (alhdn mauzuna)." 1 

As for the singing-girls which a previous ffadtth pro- 
scribes, there seems to be overwhelming evidence that the 
Prophet considered them " allowable." First there is 
the Hadith concerning the Prophet who heard the voice 
of the singing-girl when passing the abode of Hassan 
ibn Thabit. Asked by the poet if it were sinful to sing, 
Muhammad replied, " Certainly not ! " 2 

Two traditions of 'A'isha on this question are of in- 
terest. The first runs, " Abu Bakr came in to her 
['A'isha] in the Days of Mina, and with her were two 
girls playing tambourines and beating time while the 
Prophet was wrapped in his robe. And Abu Bakr 
rebuked them, but the Prophet uncovered his face and 
said, ' Let them alone, Abu Bakr, for it is the time of the 
Festivals.' " 8 The second runs, " The Apostle of Allah 
came in to me ['A'isha] while two girls were with me sing- 
ing a song (ghina) of the Day of Bu'ath, and lay down 
on his side on the bed and turned away his face. Then 
Abu Bakr entered and rebuked me, and said, ' The pipe 
of the Devil (mizmdr al-shaitdri) in the presence of the 
Apostle of Allah ! ', but the Apostle of Allah turned to 
him and said, ' Let them alone.' " 4 

Another story of 'A'isha is told as follows, " 'A'isha 
said, ' A slave-girl was singing in my house when 'Umar 
asked leave to enter. As soon as she [the slave-girl] 
heard his steps she ran away. He came in and the 
Apostle smiled. ' O Apostle of Allah,' said 'Umar, 
' what hath made thee smile ? ' The Apostle answered, 
' A slave-girl was singing here, but she ran away as soon 
as she heard thy step ! ' 'I will not depart/ said 'Umar, 
' until I hear what the Apostle heard.' So the Apostle 
called the girl back and she began to sing, the Apostle 
listening to her/' 5 

On another occasion, Muhammad entered the house of 

* Al-Ghazall, op. cit., 217. 

1 Usd al-ghdba, v, 496. Cf. ii, 127. iv, 126. 

* Al-Ghazall, op. cit., 224-5. 

* Ai-GhazSH, op. cit.. 226. 

* Kashf al-mahjub, 401. 



ISLAM AND MUSIC 27 

Al-Rubayyi' bint Mu'awwidh, when singing-girls were 
singing, and one of them remarked as the Prophet 
entered, "And with us is a Prophet who knoweth what 
shall be to-morrow." Muhammad replied, " Leave off 
that and say what thou wast saying (singing)." 1 

We also read that the women greeted Muhammad's 
arrival from the housetops with recitation (inshdd) set 
to melody (lahri), and accompanied by the beating of 
tambourines (dufuf). 2 Finally, there is the story of 
'A'isha who took to one of the Ansar his bride. When 
she returned, Muhammad said to her, " Did you lead 
the girl to her husband ? " and 'A'isha answered, " Yes." 
He then said, " And did you not send someone who 
could sing ? " and 'A'isha answered " No." Then 
the Prophet said, " Surely you knew that the Ansar 
are people who delight in the ghazal (love song)." 3 

Although some legists imagined that the Qur'anic 
condemnation of poets and poetry was directed equally 
against music, others held the view that poetry was 
" allowable," and since the song issued from poetry, 
this, too, must be lawful. The author of the 'Iqd al-fand 
says, " People differ in regard to the song (ghind'). 
Most of the people of Al-Hijaz permit it, but most of those 
of Al-'Iraq dislike it. A part of the proof of those who 
allow it is that its origin is poetry, which the Prophet 
commanded. He incited to it, urged his ' Companions * 
to it, and found help in it against the Unbelievers." 4 
'A'isha, too, had said, " Teach your children poetry 
which will sweeten their tongue." 5 It is also recorded 
that Muhammad was riding one day with some friends 
when he asked one of them to recite the poetry of Umayya. 
A hundred lines were recited for him, and Muhammad 
said at the finish, "Well done ! " "And when the satire 
in the poetry and the talking about it wearied them," 
says the tradition, " it was said, ' The poetry is good, and 
we do not see any harm in a beautiful melody (lahn).' " 6 

1 Al-Ghazall, op. cit., 743. 

Al-Ghazall, op. cit., 224. 

'Iqd al-farld, iii, 178. 

Ibid. Ibid. 

Ibid. The poetry was sung evidently. 



28 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

On another occasion Muhammad passed by a slave-girl 
and she immediately sang aloud : 

" Is there upon me (Woe to you) 
Any crime if I am gay ? " 

Muhammad answered her, " There will be no crime, 
please Allah." 1 Considerable importance was claimed 
for the testimony of al-DInawari (d. 895), who said that he 
had seen Muhammad in a vision, and that he had asked 
him specially whether he blamed music and singing, and 
that the Prophet replied, " I do not blame anything in 
it, but say to them (who resort to music and singing) 
that they open before it with the Qur'dn, and close after 
it with the Qur'an."* 

One of the stories in the great Kitab al-aghdnt (tenth 
cent.) seems to show that there was no specific ban on 
music at the dawn of Islam. The Quraish had heard 
that the famous poet-minstrel, Al-A'sha Maimun ibn 
Qais, was on his way to meet Muhammad, and they 
decided to intercept him. This they did and they en- 
deavoured to dissuade him from his project by pointing 
out that Muhammad had made " unlawful " many things 
to which Al-A'sha was strongly addicted. " And what 
are these ? " enquired the poet-minstrel. " They are 
fornication, gambling, usury, and wine/' answered 
Abu Sufyan, the chief of the Quraish. Had music 
been among the " unlawful " things, it would assuredly 
have been mentioned, seeing that Al-A'sha was interested 
in the art. 3 

Tradition is fairly persistent that Muhammad tolerated 
instrumental music. 4 He had said, " Publish the mar- 
riage, and beat the ghirbdl (round tambourine)/' 5 His 
own nuptials with Khadija were celebrated with music, 
and so were those of his daughter Fatima. 6 Popular 
legend mentions many musicians among his personal 
friends and supporters. 7 

1 Ibid. Al-Ghazall, op. cit., 206. Aghanl, viii, 85-6. 

Important passages on Muhammad and music may be found also 
in Ibn Hajar, iii, 20. Ibn Sa'd, fabaqat, iv (i), 120. 

Al-Ghazall, op. cit., 743. Lisdn al-'arab, s. " ghirbal." 

Evliya Chelebi, Travels, i, (ii), 226. * Ibid. 



ISLAM AND MUSIC 29 

Out of this maze of " tradition " or " testimony/ 1 
Islam has endeavoured to formulate a law on " listening 
to music." The four great legal schools, the Hanafi, 
the Maliki, the Shafi'i, and the Hanbali, broadly de- 
cided against its legality, although hundreds of treatises 
have been written by both legists and laymen to prove 
the opposite. 

Abu Hanlfa (699-767) is said to have " disliked singing 
(ghina'), and made listening to it a sin/' 1 although he 
appears to have looked upon musical instruments as 
lawful. 2 Malik ibn Anas (715-95) also forbade singing 
and said, "When a man buys a slave-girl and finds that 
she is a singer, then it is his duty to send her back/' 3 
The Imam al-Shafi'I (767-820) said, " Singing (ghind') 
is a sport which is disliked and which resembles what is 
false ; he who meddles much with it is light of under- 
standing, you shall reject his testimony/' 4 Ahmad 
ibn Hanbal (780-855) disliked listening to music (al- 
samd'). 5 Thus we see that the very founders of the four 
great sects were opposed to music, although their views 
differed considerably. 

In spite of the foregoing censure of Al-Shafi'I, it would 
appear that he held that music in itself was " lawful." 
The legist himself said, " I do not know one of the 
learned in Al-Hijaz who disliked music and singing except 
what consisted in amatory descriptions ; as for the 
hudd 9 (caravan song) and the mention of the traces of 
the encampment and of the spring pastures, 6 and the 
making beautiful of the voice in singing poems, they are 
permitted." 7 His school holds therefore that it is lawful 
to sing and to listen to the hudd' and the like, but inter- 
dicts all other singing that is not accompanied by musical 
instruments. Yet, even these latter are banned if they 
tend to excite unlawful desires, and among the instru- 
ments so banned are the ud, sanj, nay al-irdqt, barbat, 
rabdb, etc. These were instruments used by professional 

1 Al-Ghazalf , op. cit., 202. Hiddya, in, 558. 

Al-Ghaz5.lI, op. cit., 201. Ibid., 201. Ibid., 204. 

This refers to the prelude (naslb) of the qalda, which, when used 
by itself, is called a qit'a. 

' Al-Ghazall, op. cit'., 242-3. 



30 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

musicians, and their employment being for mere aesthetic 
or illicit pleasure they were condemned. 1 Al-Ghazall 
himself says that the objection to these instruments is 
" in so far as they are badges of people who drink and of 
the mukhannathun." 2 On the other hand, the tabl, 
shdhm, qadib, ghirbdl (or duff) were " permissible " 
instruments, because they were used by pilgrims. 3 

According to the general reading of the Shafi'I law, 
any of the " unlawful " instruments can be broken or 
destroyed (under certain conditions) without the breaker 
or destroyer incurring any liability. 4 The legal question 
turns, it would seem, on whether the instruments are 
" property " or not. If these instruments are " unlaw- 
ful " they cannot be owned by a Muslim, and therefore 
cannot be property. Thus a Muslim could destroy 
them. So far the Shafi'i school. 

The Hanaf I school argue that these musical instruments 
are " property " and in consequence are " capable of 
yielding a lawful advantage." 5 The fact that they are 
used for " unlawful " purposes does not alter their value 
as property. It is laid down therefore by this school 
that, " If a person break a barbat, tabl, mizmdr, or duff 
of a Muslim ... he is responsible, the sale of such articles 
being lawful/' Some say that the difference between 
the two schools obtains only in regard to such instruments 
as are used merely for amusement. 6 

There were certain classes of theft which were punish- 
able by amputation of the hand, but the Shafi'i school 
said, " The hand of the thief is not cut off according to 
the two disciples for stealing a duff, tabl, or mizmdr, 
because, in their opinion, these articles bear no price." 
The HanafI school point out, however, that the thief 
could say that he stole them to destroy them. 7 The 

1 Ibid., 214. Al-NawawI, 515. 

The drum called the kuba was condemned on account of its use by 
the mukhannathun. 

Al-Ghazall, op. cit. t 214, 237, 743. 
*Al-NawawI f 200. 

Abu Hanlf a had a neighbour who sang, and he once bailed him out 
of jail, because he " missed his voice." 'Iqd al-farld, iii, 181. 

Hiddya, iii, 558-9. 
7 Hidaya, ii, 92. 



ISLAM AND MUSIC 31 

same law applies to the tunbtir or other stringed instru- 
ments (ma'dzif). 1 

The actual purveyor of music also felt the hand of 
the legists. At the time of Harun al-Rashid (786-809) 
a musician was denied ordinary justice in the courts. 
The Imam al-Shafi'i had laid it down that the testimony 
of a person who indulged in music was untrustworthy. 
According to the Hiddya, " the testimony of women 
that lament or sing is not admissible, because they are 
guilty of forbidden actions, inasmuch as the Prophet 
has prohibited those two species of noise." 2 In the 
Tanbih of Abu Ishaq al-Shirazi (d. 1083), singers in 
general were included in this law. 3 The Hiddya also 
stipulates that " It is not lawful to give a pledge for the 
wages either of a mourner or of a singer." 4 

When one views all these pains and penalties which had 
been directed against music, it is a wonder that the art 
thrived at all under Islam. But the truth is that in 
spite of the rigours of the legists and theologians, the law 
concerning " listening to music " has been honoured 
more in the breach than in the observance. Sinners 
in this respect always had some sort of back-door of escape, 
which is well illustrated by a story in the 'Iqd al-farid. 
A certain prominent man of Al-Hijaz was making the 
pilgrimage to Mecca and was found lying on his prayer- 
mat singing. A kinsman who passed by reproved him 
saying, " Allah forbid that I should hear you do the like 
of this, and you a pilgrim." The offending one replied, 
" O son of my brother, and aieyou not listening to me ? " 6 
The law condemns not only the singer or player, but also 
the listener 1 6 

Islam never really eradicated the Pagan ideals of the 
Arab so far as music is concerned. Although the charge 
that the opposition to " listening " (al-samd') was 
fabricated by the 'Abbasid theologians may have much 
to support it, yet there can be little doubt that Muhammad 



ii, 89. Ibid., ii, 687. Tanbl h, 336. 

4 Hiddya, iv, 212. 
'Iqd al-farid, iii, 178. 
D'Ohssbn, Tab. Gtn. t ii, 188. 



32 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

was indirectly responsible for the germ of the oppo- 
sition. 1 

There are some writers who account for Muhammad's 
attitude on purely physiological grounds. In him, the 
senses appear to have been quite abnormally developed. 
His sense of smell was a veritable burden to him.- He 
was hypersensitive in the matter of touch. Gastronomic 
affairs almost became a mania with him. He had 
visions. He was afflicted with hummings in the ears, 
and heard the sounds of cats, hares, and bells, which 
caused him much annoyance, if not suffering. Even 
the jingling of the caravan bells troubled him. In such 
an extraordinary structure, a veritable slave to hyper- 
aesthesia, one might reasonably expect to find a mind 
temperamentally averse to music, or at least, insensible 
to its charms and beauties. To the same cause has been 
attributed his lack of rhythmic instinct. 2 It is very easy, 
however, to overstate the physical and psychical reflexes 
in Muhammad, and there is, in fact, many a Hadtth 
to counter objections on these lines. It has been shown 
by Dr. Hartwig Hirschfeld that this so-called " lack of 
rhythmic instinct " was really a deliberate attempt by 
Muhammad to ignore prosodical forms lest he should be 
taken for a mere soothsayer or magician. " The general 
form of any sort of public announcement being poetic, 
Muhammad had to avoid all imitation of it, and this 
gave him immense trouble." Yet although he only just 
managed to escape from the " ditty " form of the urjuza 
(verses in rajaz), he could not evade the saf (rhymed 
prose). 3 

Muhammad's attitude towards music might perhaps 
be explained on somewhat similar lines. The kind of 
music that accompanied the poetry which glorified in 

1 A Muslim has said, " Nowhere do we see pious men more given to 
falsehood than in tradition" (Noeldeke, Gesch. des Qorans, 22). It 
does not follow however, that all were conscious frauds, for we must 
remember Muhammad's saying, " Whatever good saying has been said, 
I myself have said it." And again : " You must compare the sayings 
attributed to the Qur'dn ; what agrees therewith is from me, whether 
I actually said it or no." See Goldziher, Muh. Stud., 48, 

* Lammcns, Melanges de la Facultt Orientale (Beyrouth), iii, 230-3. 

Hirschfeld, 37. 



ISLAM AND MUSIC 33 

the ideals of Paganism he had to avoid. He may not 
have been blessed with the " Beautiful Voice " himself 
with which to deliver his " Revelations/ 1 but he certainly 
realized the value of it. He favoured Abu Mahdura 
on account of his " Beautiful Voice," whilst he likened 
the chanting (qard'a) of Abu Musa al-Ash'arl to " a pipe 
(mizmdr) from the pipes of David/' 1 Yet this chanting 
of the Qiir'dn would have to be different from the singing 
of poetry if Muhammad would keep his hearers' minds 
away from thoughts of Paganism, and so a legal fiction 
arose which determined that the cantilation (taghbir) 2 
of the Qur'dn and the tahKl, was merely a modulation 
of the voice which could be grasped by the learned and 
unlearned in music alike, it being of a different genre 
(so it was said) from the ghind' or song proper, which 
belonged to the professional musician. 3 The cantilation 
of the Qur'dn is said to have been introduced by 'Ubaidal- 
lah ibn Abi Bakr, the governor of Sijistan (appointed 
697), but it evidently had an earlier existence. 

The adhdn (call to prayer) was instituted by the 
Prophet himself in the first or second year of the Hijra, 
and Bilal the Abyssinian was the first mu'adhdhin 
(caller to prayer). 4 The adhdn, too, is considered a 
cantilation of a like nature to that of the Qur'dn, but in 
spite of the legal distinction between " cantilation " 
and " singing/' we are assured by Ibn Qutaiba (d. ca. 
889) that the Qur'dn was sung to no different rules than 
those of the ordinary artistic songs (alhdn al-ghind'), 
and the caravan song (hudd'). 5 Indeed, it was openly 
said that if melodies (alhdn) were to be considered " un- 
lawful " then the cantilations of the Qur'dn and the 
adhdn were equally so and had better be dispensed with. 6 
The cantilation of the Qur'dn was in fact actually pro- 

t'lqd al-fartd, iii, 176. Al-Ghazall, of. cit. t 209. 

Professor I). B. Macdonald, quoting Sayyid Murtada's Ithaf al-sdda, 
writes ta'blv (" expression "), but Ibn Khaldun, both in Quatremere's 
text and in Von Hammer's translation has taghblr. Cf. Dozy, Glossaire, 
13. Abu Ishaq al-Zajjaj (d. 922) makes it taghblr and explains its 
derivation from ghablr. 

8 Ibn Khaldun, ii, 359. 

4 Al-Bukharl, i, 209. Mishkdt al-masablh, i, 141. 

5 Ibn Qutaiba, 265. 

'Iqd al-farld, iii, 178. 



34 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

scribed by the Maliki school, although allowed by the 
Shafi'i. 1 All the schools, except the Hanbali, permitted 
the adhdn. 

Besides these " allowable " musical customs there 
were those of Pagan Arabia, which Islam was impotent 
in restricting, as in many other of the moving social 
Semitic forces. 2 Like the Christian Roman emperors, 
Muhammad had to adapt himself to the social resistance 
when he found that he could not mould it to his wishes, 
and in this way the Pagan festivals, even with their 
malahi or " forbidden pleasures," came into acceptance 
under fresh sanctions. 

First there were the old Pagan chantings of the pil- 
grimage, the tahtil and talbiyya, which were turned 
favourably to the account of Islam and became " lawful/' 
even to the allowability of the tall (drum) and shdhm 
(fife) as an accompaniment. 3 Music for the pilgrimage 
became a necessity. 4 

The song of war, i.e., of inciting to war against the 
infidel, was allowable because it " summons a man to 
warfare by inciting courage and by moving wrath and 
anger against the unbelievers." The actual battle-song, 
such as that in the rajaz verses, was allowed on the 
same grounds. The legists allowed what they could not 
prevent in most cases, because many of these customs 
were too deeply ingrained in the Semite to be plucked out 
by a fiat. It had been the custom of 'All and Khalid, 
and other valiant " Companions of the Prophet/' 5 Yet 
the shdhm was forbidden in the camp lest its plaintive 
sound should "soften the heart." 6 

The nauh or elegy was lawful, for this was too valuable 
an asset to Islam, despite its pagan character, to be set 
aside. The wilwdl or wailing, however, was forbidden 
(save in certain cases), but in spite of all the penalties, 
and all the centuries, it still remains. 7 

1 Ibn Khaldun, ii, 357. 

Abu'1-Fida' says : " The Arabs of the Days of Idolatry did things 
which Islam has accepted." 

Al-Ghazall. 220. Al-Ghazall, 221. Al-Ghazall, 222. 

Ibid. In one of the Arabic chronicles of the Crusades the Muslims 
are made to banish flutes from their camp for this reason. 

' 'AH Bey, i, 183. 



ISLAM AND MUSIC 35 

Then there was the music of the feast and festival such 
as abounded in Pagan Arabia. This, too, found a place 
in the public festivals connected with Islam, such as 
exists to-day in the 'id al-adha, the 'id al-fitr, the yaum 
'ashura, and the various mawdlid. 1 Music was allowed 
when joy was allowed, such as on the days of private 
festivals like betrothals, weddings, births, and circum- 
cisions. Finally, the love-song was allowable. 

Yet there was something that even the legists had not 
taken into account, and that was the spiritual effects 
of music. It was this that had given the soothsayer and 
magician of old that wonderful power over the people, 
and strange to say the legists did not apprehend it. 
Arabic tradition had it that the Prophet David brought 
the birds and beasts to listen by means of his voice, 
and the two-and-seventy different notes of his " blessed 
throat/' 2 People that heard his voice died of rapture. 3 
The mysterious power of music was something that the 
Arabs could see for themselves in every-day life. They 
saw the camel alter its pace according to a change of 
rhythm or measure 4 ; deer were rendered docile by 
melody 5 ; snakes were charmed, bees made to alight, 6 
and birds actually dropped dead at the sound of music. 7 
There is an abundant literature which tells us of people 
who have been deeply influenced by the " Beautiful 
Voice." 8 Yet what connection has this "spiritual" 
music to that which the legists said was the procurer 
of drunkenness and fornication ? The ufi shall answer. 

" Music and singing do not produce in the heart that 
which is not in it," says Abu Sulaiman al-Darani (d. ca. 
820),* and so those who are affected by music can be 
divided into two classes as has been done by Al-Hujwiri 
(eleventh cent.), the author of the Kashf al-mahjub, as 

1 The 'Id al-adha (sacrificial feast) is held on the loth dh&'l-frijja, 
and it is the actual day that the Pagan Arabs sacrificed in the Vale of 
Mina. 

Mlrkhwand, ii (i), 57. 

91 Iqd al-farld t in, 179. Kashf al-mahjub, 402. 

'Jqd al-farid, in, 177. Al-GhazalS, 219. 

Kashf al-mahjub, 400. 'Iqd al-favld, iii, 177. 

' A ghaut, v, 52. Al-Ghazall, 219. Sa'dl, Gulistdn, ii, 27. iii, 28. 

'Iqd al-farld, iii, 198. Al-Ghazall, 715. Kash al-ma(ijub t 407. 
Al-Ghazall, 220. 



36 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

follows : (i) Those who hear the spiritual meaning, and 
(2) Those who hear the material sound. " There are good 
and evil results in each case/' says this author. " Listen- 
ing to sweet sounds produces an effervescence of the 
substance moulded in man ; true, if the substance be 
true, false, if the substance be false. When the stuff of 
man's temperament is evil, that which he hears will be 
evil, too." 1 Then he goes on to quote Muhammad in 
the saying, " O Allah, let us see things as they are." 
So, says our author, " right audition consists in hearing 
everything as it is in quality and predicament." Thus 
the suft looked upon music as a means of revelation 
attained through ecstasy. 

Dhu'1-Nun says, " Listening (al-samd') is a divine 
influence which stirs the heart to see Allah ; those who 
listen to it spiritually attain to Allah, and those who 
listen to it sensually fall into heresy." Another sufi, 
Al-Shibll, says, " Listening to music is outwardly a 
temptation and inwardly an admonition." Says Abu'l- 
Husainal-Darraj, "Listening . . . causes me to find the 
existence of the Truth beside the Veil." 

In the ufi conception of music, such as we have in 
Al-Hujwiri and Al-Ghazali, 2 we see much of what the 
modern Schopenhauer taught. To the latter, music is 
the eternal will itself, and through it one can pierce the 
Veil, witness the Watcher, and behold the Unseen. 3 
Thus was music called in as a handmaid to Islam after 
all, and as such it is recognized in every Islamic land 
in spite of Islam. 



Of the musicians contemporary with Muhammad, 
several have been mentioned in the preceding chapter. 
Besides these there were a few who came in personal 
contact with the Prophet and Islam, and on that account 
are mentioned here. 

1 Kashf al-mahjub, 402-3. 

J Both the Kashf al-mahjub of Al-Hujwiri and the section on music 
in the Ihya 'ulum al-din of Al-GhazaU have been translated into English. 
See Bibliography. 

Al-Ghazali, 720, 



ISLAM AND MUSIC 37 

Bilal ibn Riyah (Rabah, Ribab) al-Habashi (d. 641) 
was the son of an Abyssinian slave-girl who had been 
ransomed by Abu Bakr. He was one of the first converts 
to Islam, and suffered for it. Muhammad called him 
" The First-Fruits of Abyssinia," and made him his 
purse-bearer. To him the Prophet is claimed to have 
said, " O Bilal, sing us a ghazal." He was the first 
mu'adhdhin (caller to prayer) in Islam, and is nowadays 
considered the patron saint of those who follow this 
calling. Bilal died at Damascus, where his tomb may 
be seen. 1 

Shirln is the name of the singing-girl of Hassan ibn 
Thabit the Prophet's panegyrist. 2 It is not improbable 
that she is the slave-girl Sirin who, with her sister Mariya 
the Copt was sent to the Prophet by Al-Muqauqis, the 
governor of Egypt in 630. Sirin was handed over to 
Hassan, whilst Mariya became one of the Prophet's 
wives. 3 During the " Orthodox" khalifate we read that 
the famous songstress, 'Azza al-Maila', sang the songs 
of an early singing-girl (qaina) named Sinn, who may 
have been identical with the Sirin or Shirln of Hassan 
ibn Thabit. 4 

The names of three other singing-girls have come 
down to us from this period in consequence of their 
being doomed for destruction by the Prophet just prior 
to his entrance into Mecca as conqueror in 630. Their 
sole " crime " was that they had sung satirical songs 
against him. The first of these singing girls was Sara, 
who belonged to 'Amr ibn Hashim (or Hisham) ibn 
'Abd al-Muttalib. She escaped death by " opportunate 
submission." 5 Quraina (or Kurinna, Fartana) and Qariba 
(or Arnab), who were in the service of 'Abdallah [ibn 
Hilal] ibn Khatal al-Adrami, were also proscribed. 
Only Quraina suffered the death penalty. 6 

1 Ibn Hisham, 205. Caetani, iii, 99. Evliya Cheleb!, i, (ii), 91, in. 
Al-Nawawi, 176. 

a Kashf al-mahjub, 411. 
8 Al-Tabari, cf . Index. 

* Aghanl, iv, 14. Guidi looks upon them as separate individuals. 
8 Muir, Mohammad, 411. 

Al-Tabarii i, 1626, 1640-2. Al-WaqidI, 343. Caetani, ii, (i), 134. 

D 



38 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

From a comparatively modern Turkish authority, 
Evliya Chelebl (d. ca. 1680), we learn the names of three 
male musicians who are said to have performed before 
the Prophet. Only one of these names has a classical 
attestation, and that is 'Amr ibn Umayya, although we 
get no mention of his musical accomplishments from the 
latter source. 1 Yet the tradition can scarcely be of late 
origin, seeing that two of these individuals are claimed 
as patron saints of musical fraternities. The three 
musicians mentioned by Evliya Chelebi are : 

'Amr ibn Umayya Dhamiri, also called Baba 'Amr, 
or 'Amr 'lyar, is said to have played the daira (round 
tambourine) at the wedding of 'AH and Fatima, and all 
tambourine players look upon him as their patron 
saint. 2 He was one of the " Companions of the Prophet/' 

Hamza ibn Yatim (or Yatima) is said to have sung with 
Bilal in the presence of the Prophet, and to have been 
girded by 'All (or Salman al-FarisI). He is also said to 
to have sung at the wedding of 'All and Fatima. He is 
the patron saint of all singers, and his tomb is pointed 
out at Al-Ta'if. 3 

Baba Sawandik was an Indian who is credited with 
having played the kettledrum called kus in the Prophet's 
military expeditions. He is said to have been buried 
at Al-Mausil, near Jarjish. 4 

1 Caetani, i, 283. 

Evliya Cheleb!, i, (ii), 226, 234. 

Evliya Chelebl, i, (ii), 113, 226, 233, 134. 
'Ibid., i, (ii), 226. 



CHAPTER III 

THE ORTHODOX KHALIFS 
(A.D. 632-661) 

" And the first of those who sang the graceful music (ghina* al-raqtq) 
in Islam was Tuwais." 

Ibn 'Abd Rabbihi 'Iqd al-farld (loth century). 

UPON the death of the Prophet in 632, the Faithful 
elected a successor in the person of Abu Bakr, whom they 
saluted as Khalifa ("Successor"). Three succeeding 
khalifs were also elected by the suffrages of the Muslims, 
and these " Successors " were 'Umar (634), 'Uthman 
(644), and 'AH (656). No sooner had the Prophet 
passed away than Arabia was torn asunder by dissension. 
False prophets arose on every side, and the tribes from 
distant 'Uman to the very threshold of Al-Medina the 
capital were in open revolt against the Khalif ate and in 
avowed apostasy from Islam. Yet within a year the 
dissident crowd was brought back to the political and 
religious fold. To effect this, however, huge armies 
had been set in motion, and the spirit of warfare against 
the infidel in general was roused to its highest pitch. 
Babylonia, Mesopotamia, Syria, and Egypt, were invaded 
and conquered (633-43), a circumstance which was of 
great cultural significance to the coming Muslim civiliza- 
tion. 

The days of the four Rashidun or " Orthodox " khalifs 
were the strict days of Islam, when the letter of the law 
as laid down or implied by the Prophet, or such inter- 
pretations of it as the " Companions of the Prophet " 
thought it their duty to declare, were rigidly enforced. 
Music was banned. Ibn Khaldun, the greatest of Muslim 
historians, avers that at the beginning of Islam everything 

39 



40 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

that did not fall in with the teachings of the Qur'dn was 
scorned, whilst the song and pantomime were forbidden. 
On the other hand, a modern Muslim historian, Sayyid 
Amir 'AH, is of opinion that music was not proscribed 
until the later legists came on the scene. 1 

The first two khalifs had, possibly, little love for, 
nor any interest in, music. They were certainly too 
busy with the sword in consolidating Islam to dally 
much with the arts. They practised the utmost sim- 
plicity of life themselves, and they expected it in others. 
They knew that the arts could not be indulged in without 
ostentation and even prodigality, both of which were 
frowned on by these khalifs. We know that one of the 
charges brought against the famous Arab general, 
Abu Musa, was that he had bestowed a thousand pieces 
of silver (darahim) 2 upon a poet. 3 

Since general culture was primarily dependent upon the 
social and political regimen, and this is nowhere more 
conspicuously evident than in the Khalifate, it will be my 
plan in each chapter to deal with the individual khalifs 
and rulers first of all, so that we may apprehend the 
culture conditions at the outset. 



Under Abu Bakr (632-34) it may be taken for granted 
that music as part and parcel of the malahi or " forbidden 
pleasures " was interdicted. Precise evidence, however, 
is wanting. The singing-girls (qainat, qiyari) t who were 
slaves in the households of the noble and wealthy families, 
were possibly not interfered with, but it is fairly certain 
that those of the taverns, as well as public musicians 
in general were suppressed, or at least, dared not follow 
their vocation. The singer of elegies (nd'ih, fern. 
na'iha) was probably tolerated for the reason that the 
elegy (nauh) was not considered music like the song called 

1 Syed Ameer All, Short Hist, of the Saracens, 457. 

* A dirham (pi. darahim) was a silver com something like a sixpence, 
and twenty of them made a dinar (pi. dandnlr), a gold coin, not unlike 
a half-sovereign. 

Muir, The Caliphate, 180. 



THE ORTHODOX KHALIFS 41 

ghina'. Al-Tabarl has recorded that two singing-girls 
named Thabja al-Ha<Jramiyya and Hind bint Yamin, 
had their hands cut off and their teeth pulled out, so that 
they could neither play nor sing. This was done by Al- 
Muhajir when he subdued Al-Yaman in 633, and it 
received the approbation of Abu Bakr. Yet this punish- 
ment was not necessarily occasioned by the fact that they 
were musicians, but merely because they had sung songs 
which had satirized the Muslims 1 to the accompaniment 
of a leed-pipe (mizmdr). 

In spite of the austere regime of Abu Bakr, there appear 
to have been a goodly few who indulged in the maldhl. 
" Nature is not to be for ever thus pent up ; the rebound 
too often comes ; and in casting off its shackles, humanity 
not seldom bursts likewise through the barriers of Faith. 

The gay youth of Islam, cloyed with the dull delights 
of the sequestered harim, were tempted thus when 
abroad to evade the restrictions of their creed, and seek 
in the cup, in music, games and dissipation, the excitement 
which the young and lighthearted will demand." 2 But 
there were days of greater freedom in store. 

'Umar (634-44) seems to have been little different 
from his predecessor in this respect. According to a 
HadUh of 'A'isha, 'Umar had heard a singing-girl in the 
very household of the Prophet. 3 This may have influ- 
enced him in favour of the singing-girls at least. It is 
also said that he trembled at the thought that the Qur'dn 
should be recited otherwise than in melodious tones. 4 
'Asim his son was particularly devoted to music, whilst 
one of the khalifs governors, Al-Nu'man ibn 'Adi, 
who had charge of Maisan, was certainly a patron of 
the art. 5 

On the other hand there is a story told by Ibn al-Faqih 
al-Hamadhani (fl. 902) that on one occasion 'Umar 
heard slave-girls playing their tambourines (dufuf) and 
singing that " Life is made for pleasure," when he up- 

1 Al-fabarl, i, 2014. Al-Baladhurl, 102. Caetani, ii (2), 802. 

Muir, The Caliphate, 185. 

Kashf al-mahjub, 401. 

Ibn Sa'd, Jabaqdt al-kablr, v, 42. 

Ibn Hisham, 782. 



42 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

braided and cudgelled them for this. 1 Yet one must ask 
whether his disapproval was on account of the song or 
of the sentiment. The latter is the more likely explana- 
tion, since we have the tradition that 'Umar was abroad 
one day when the sound of the tambourine reached his 
ears. 'Umar asked what it was, and when he was told 
that it was the merry-making at a circumcision, it is 
distinctly stated that the khalif held his peace. 2 

Several stories are told in the 'Iqd al-fand concerning 
'Umar and music. In one of these, 'Umar, when asking 
a man to sing added, " May Allah forgive you for it." 
The remark clearly shows how he stood in regard to the 
conventional ban. Two nobles of the Quraish (one 
of them being 'Asim ibn 'Amr), whom 'Umar heard 
singing, were dubbed " asses " by the khalif. On both 
these occasions the singing was the rakbdni of the nasb, 
which had tacitly been acknowledged to be " allowable." 3 
'Umar was wont to make a tour of Al-Medina at night, 
so as to see that there were no infractions of the law. 4 
On one occasion he came to a house where the master 
was listening to the voice of his singing-girl and was 
indulging in the wine-cup to boot. 'Umar burst in upon 
the scene crying, " Shame on thee." The shamed one 
turned the tables on the khalif by retorting, " Shame on 
thee for violating the sanctity of the household, which is 
forbidden by the word of Allah." 5 The author of the 
Kitdb al-agham says, " It has been said that Khalif 
'Umar had composed a song, but nothing is less probable." 
Possibly, the historians had confused this khalif with the 
later 'Umar II (717-20), who was certainly a composer. 
Yet 'Umar I has been claimed as a poet by Ibn Hajar 6 
and Ibn Duraid. 7 

'Uthman (644-56) was the next khalif, and under his 
rule a great change came to the social and political life 
of the Arabs. Unlike his predecessor, 'Umar, who was 

1 Ibn al-Faqih, Bibl. Geog. Arab., v, 43. 

1 Taj al-arus, sub 'azifa. See also Ibn Khallikan, i, 359. 

'Iqd al-farid, iii, 178-9. 

4 Cf . Syed Ameer All, Short History, 67. 

Lammens, iii, 275. Cf. Al-Tabarl, i, 2742. 

Ibn Hajar, ii, 21. 

' Ibn Duraid, Ishtiqdt, 225. Cf. Al-Baladhurl, 99. 



THE ORTHODOX KHALIFS 43 

content to sit on the steps of the mosque at Al-Medina 
eating his barley-bread and dates, 'Uthman was fond 
of wealth and display. With the vast treasures and 
crowds of captives which kept pouring into Al-Hijaz 
from conquered lands, the Arabs were able to build up 
for themselves such glories as they had seen and envied 
in other Arabian lands, as well as in Persia and the 
Byzantine Empire, which had fallen to their swords. 
Gorgeous palaces, large retinues of slaves, brilliant 
equipages and sumptuous living became the order of 
the day not only in Al-'Iraq and Syria, which already 
knew of these things, but even in the holy cities of Al- 
Hijaz. In all the palaces and houses of the nobility and 
the wealthy, music and musicians came in for special 
indulgence, in spite of the averred ban of the Prophet, 
and the murmurs of the stricter Muslims. 

'All (656-61) was himself a poet, and he was the first 
khalif who extended any open and real protection to the 
fine arts and letters by authorizing the study of the 
sciences, poetry and music. 1 From this date, the future 
of music was assured, and when the Khalif ate passed from 
the Rdshidun khalifs to the Umayyad dynasty, the art 
had practically become established in the court of the 
very " successor " of the Prophet. 

n 

The general position of music and musicians, together 
with considerable details of the theory and practice of the 
art in the early days of the Khalif ate, seem fairly well 
defined by the annalists. In the first half-century of 
Islam, the conditions, as we have seen, were scarcely 
propitious for the arts. Not only were men's minds 
centred on the battle throng, but the austerity of life 
under the new regime left little room for these things. 
In Pagan days the tribes would dispute the pre-eminence 
of one poet over another, but now they squabbled over 
the precise way of reading the Qur'dn. Yet there were 
new social forces at work in Al-I3ijaz. The propagation 

1 Salvador-Daniel, 20. 



44 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

of Islam by the sword brought its own revenge. The 
Arab armies had reclaimed Babylonia and Mesopotamia 
from the Persians. Syria and Egypt had been wrested 
from Byzantium. Finally, the great land of Persia 
itself had been conquered. The banner of Islam had not 
only linked up the two extremes of Arab social life, the 
nomads of the desert and the cultured citizens of Al-Hira, 
Al-Yaman and Ghassan, but it had brought them in 
touch with civilizations which were more cultured and 
refined than anything that Al-Hijaz, the political centre, 
had hitherto experienced. The result was that Al- 
Medlna, the seat of the Khalifate, became " the centre 
of attraction, not to the hosts of Arabia only, but also 
to enquirers from abroad. Here flocked the Persian, 
the Greek, the Syrian, the 'Iraqian, and the African." 1 
The influence of these people cannot be ignored, although 
the induction of alien elements must not be overstated. 
Clearly, the Arabs were too jealous of encroachments 
upon that sacred and superior thing called Arab nation- 
ality to permit of " foreign " ways and customs to any 
great degree. Every word of 'Umar tells us that. 2 
Islam meant much in these days, but the word " Arab " 
meant more. 3 

We have seen that during the " Days of Idolatry " 
music, as a profession, was in the hands of the women-folk 
and slave-girls for the greater part, at any rate in Al-Hijaz 
and the peninsula generally. This continued for the first 
decade of the Khalifate. During the reign of 'Uthman 
(644-56), however, a new figure appears in Al-Hijaz the 
male professional musician. He was quite common in 
Persia and Al-Hira, whilst in Byzantium and Syria he 
had had a place from time immemorial. It is worthy 
of note from whence this innovation came. The first 
male professional musicians in Al-Hijaz belonged to a 
class known as the mukhannathun (sing. mukhannath) t 
who were evidently unknown in Pagan times. 4 These 
people were an effeminate class who dyed their hands and 

1 Syed Ameer All, Mohammad, 531. 
Al-Jabarl, i, 2751. 

Jurji Zaidan, 29-31. 

* Lane, Lexicon, s.v. 



THE ORTHODOX KHALIFS 45 

affected the habits of women. 1 The first male profes- 
sional musician in the days of Islam is generally acknow- 
ledged to have been Tuwais the mukhannath, and indeed, 
it is said that "in Al-Medina, music (ghina') had its 
origin among the mukhannathun."* 

The circumstance scarcely augured well for music. 
Already the stricter Muslims had proscribed this art, 
or at any rate looked upon it as something disreputable. 
No wonder that it had become part and parcel of the 
malahl or " forbidden pleasures," and linked up with 
wine-bibbing, gaming and fornication. 3 Indeed, the 
notoriety of the singing-girls of the taverns had led to 
such terms as mughanniya (female musician), sanndja 
(female saw; player), and zammdra (female zamr player) be- 
ing considered as synonyms for courtesan and adulteress. 4 
Now there was added the disrepute of the mukhannathiln. 
Yet in spite of these unpleasant associations, the art 
was able to throw off much of the anathema hurled against 
it. This was mainly owing to the interest displayed by 
the upper classes, and also perhaps to the old musical 
traditions of Al-Medina, the city of the Ansar who had 
always been keen lovers of the song, as even the Prophet 
himself had testified. 

At first, all the professional musicians, male and female, 
came from the servile class, slaves or free-folk. These 
latter were called the mawdli (sing, mauld) . Ibn Khaldun 
has said that the Arabs, in their exercise of military 
command and government service, were led to look 
upon the arts as beneath their personal attention. The 
study and cultivation of such things were for the mawdli, 
who were, for the most part, Persians. That is substan- 
tially true. The Arabs looked upon themselves as the 
elect of Allah, the aristocracy of nations, whose only 
" business " was that of the warrior. It does not mean, 

l For these mukhannatkun see Aghanl, i, 97, 108. ii, 170-1. iv, 
35. 59, 61. Abu'1-Fida', Annales Moslemici (Reiske), i, 109. Ibn 
Khallikan, i, 438. Kosegarten, Lib. Cant., 1 1 . Burton, Arabian Nights, 
Terminal Essay. Caetani, ii (i), 175, and the lexica of Lane and 
Freytag. 

Aghanl, iv, 161. Probably a canard of the legists (ulamd'). 

8 Abu Muslim, ajilh t ii, 123. 

Al-'Askad. (Quoted by Lammens iii, 235). 



46 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

however, that they ceased to be interested in the arts, 
for never in the history of the East did they flourish 
as they did under the Khalifate. Nor does it mean, as 
so many have assumed, that the arts which were encour- 
aged were wholly alien importations. 1 Nothing can be 
further from the truth. We may talk about music being 
an international language, but to the Arab it could not 
be divorced from song. He had his own national dis- 
positions, and perhaps pre-dispositions, to be satisfied 
on the purely melodic and mensural or rhythmic side, 
which no alien music could satiate. He obviously had 
an indigenous musical system which was different to 
some extent from that of Persia and Byzantium. 

The first male professional musician in Islam, Tuwais, 
was evidently an Arab, or at least he appears to have been 
born and educated in Arabia, and therefore had been 
schooled in the national music. 2 Sa'ib Khathir, although 
the son of a Persian slave, was brought up to Arabian 
music, and only learned some of the tricks of the Persian 
art later. 'Azza al-Maila', one of the first important 
female professional musicians in Islam, boasted that she 
carried on the musical traditions of the old Pagan song- 
stresses of Arabia, Sinn, Zirnab, Khaula, Al-Rabab, 
Salma and Ra'iqa, her own teacher. It was her renderings 
of the old Arabian music that brought her fame. That 
she also sang Persian melodies is merely incidental, 
as it was with other musicians. 

What the music of the Arabs was like at this period 
we can conjecture from the names of their musical 
instruments and the various technical musical expres- 
sions. Among the stringed instruments we read of the 
mi'zafa (? psaltery) and mi'zaf (? barbiton). 3 The former 
was especially favoured in Al-Yaman, but also common 
perhaps in Al-Hijaz. 4 The mizhar was a lute, apparently 

1 'Umar detested the Persians and would have none of their refine- 
ments for his people. He had the palace of Sa'd ibn Abl Waqqas at 
Al-Kufa burned. It had been built by the Muslims in imitation of the 
Persian Taq-i Khusrau, at Al-Mada'in. 

1 The date of his birth, 632, proves that to some extent. 

See my Studies in Oriental Musical Instruments, pp. 7-8. 

4 Aghanl, xvi, 13. Al-Mas'udl, viii, 93. Lane, Lexicon, s.v. 



THE ORTHODOX KHALIFS 47 

with a skin belly, which had considerable vogue, 1 although 
it had been superseded, to a considerable extent probably, 
by the 'ud, a wooden-bellied lute, introduced about the 
close of the previous century from Al-Hira. a The 
tunbur or pandore appears to have received greater 
appreciation in Al-'Iraq, 3 where the jank or harp was 
also afforded grace. 

Among the wind instruments, the vertical flute was 
known as the qussdba or qa$aba,* whilst the reed-pipe 
was called the mizmdr, a term also used for wood-wind 
instruments in general, as we have seen. 5 The horn 
or clarion was the buq, 6 although it was not yet a martial 
instrument. 

First among the instruments of percussion was the 
qadib or wand, which was popular with those who sang 
the improvisation (murtajal). 7 The duff or square 
tambourine was another favoured instrument for marking 
the rhythms or measures. 8 The sunnuj saghwa were 
the small metal castanets which were part of the im- 
pedimenta of the dancers. Finally, the term fabl covered 
the drum family proper. 

In chamber music we do not read of a combination 
of these different instruments in performance, although 
this does not preclude the possibility of it. 9 Tuwais, 
the first male professional musician in Islam, never 
accompanied himself with any other instrument save the 
duff. 'Azza al-Maila' is usually represented playing on 
the old Arabian mi'zafa and mizhar, although she could 
also play the 'ud. Sa'ib Khathir began his career with the 
qadib, but later he took up the 'ud, and he is claimed to 
have been the first in Al-Medina to accompany his singing 
with the 'ud, which looks as though the instrument 
had previously been used only for purely instrumental 
performances, or else that it had fallen into desuetude 
under early Islamic rigours. 

Considerable progress was made on the technical 
side of the art. This was due to a variety of causes. 

1 Aghani, xvi, 13-14. Al-Mas'udI, viii, 93-4. 

Aghanl, v, 161. * Lane, Lexicon, s.v. 

Mufa^cUiyydt, xvii. Lane, Lexicon, s.v. 

Aghanl, vii, 188. Aghanl , ii, 174. Ibid. 



48 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

First, there were the new ideas which came to the Arabs 
through the fresh culture contacts. Then there was the 
rise of a professional class of male musicians. Finally, 
the inordinate passion for music, which found its lead in 
the highest circles, gave an impetus to improvement 
on the technical side, so as to meet with the new demands 
that verse was making. 

It was the patronage of the art and its professors by 
the nobility that put the hall-mark of " respectability " 
and " allowableness " upon music. 'A'isha, the favourite 
wife of the Prophet, Al-Hasan, the grandson of Khalif 
'All, Sukaina, the daughter of Al-Husain, Sa'd ibn Abi 
Waqqas, ' A'isha bint Sa'd, Mus'ab ibn al-Zubair, 'A'isha 
bint Talha, and 'Abdallah ibn Ja'far, were all keen 
supporters of music and protectors of its professors. 
At a reception given by 'A'isha bint Talha, the wife of 
Mus'ab ibn al-Zubair, a prominent professional songstress 
like 'Azza al-Maila', who was engaged to entertain the 
guests, was treated on an equality with the noble dames of 
the Quraish. 'Abdallah ibn Ja'far, himself a brilliant 
amateur, made his palace a veritable conservatory of 
music. 1 He was the patron of most of the eminent 
musicians of the day, and among them, Tuwais, Sa'ib 
Khathir, Nashlt, Nafi' al-Khair, Budaih al-Mal!h, Qand, 
and 'Azza al-Maila'. 

Fresh culture contacts found expression in new types 
of song or styles of singing. The prisoners captured 
in the Persian wars were toiling as slaves on the public 
works at Al-Medina, and their national melodies began 
to attract considerable attention. Tuwais, the leading 
Arab musician of the day, found it profitable to imitate 
their style. Later, a Persian slave named Nashlt, 
became the rage on account of the vogue for Persian airs. 
Sa'ib Khathir also realized that he had to fall in with the 
popular demand and supply his public with the latest 
craze. Even 'Azza al-Maila', the conservatrix of the old 
Arabian art, had to go to Nashlt and Sa'ib Khathir 
so as to learn these novel fancies. Yet, as I have pointed 

1 Al-Mas'udI, v, 385. Cf. De Meynard's translation of this passage. 
Jurjl Zaidan, 89. 'Iqd al-fartd, iii, 198. 



THE ORTHODOX KHALIFS 49 

out elsewhere, 1 there is no question of any musical system 
or theory being borrowed from the Persians, since it 
was no more than one nationality borrowing from the 
other a particular type of song or style of singing, and the 
imitation is expressly mentioned in the Kitab al-aghdm 
as being connected with the melody. Indeed, we know 
that Nashit himself had to take lessons from Sa'ib 
Khathir in the Arabian type of song or style of singing, 
so as to meet the demands of his patrons. 

That progress was made in the art at this period is 
stressed by the historians. We have seen that in the 
" Days of Idolatry " there was only one type of song 
known in Al-Hijaz, and that was the nasb, which was 
merely an improved hudd' or caravan song. This is 
said to have been made up of " measured melodies " 
(alhdn mauzuna), although we must not suppose that this 
measure referred to the iqd* or " rhythm " that we read 
of later, but rather that the melody was measured 
according to the prosodical feet (arud). 

About the close of the " Orthodox " period, we read of 
the introduction of a more artistic genre of music called 
the ghind' al-mutqan, whose special feature was the 
application of an iqa' or rhythm to the melody of the 
song, which was independent of the metre ('artid) 
of the verse. Whatever may have prompted it, its pro- 
duction would appear to have been quite indigenous, 
and seemingly was an offshoot from metrical principles. 
At any rate it was scarcely borrowed from the Persians, 
who have been claimed as the inventors of iqff or 
" rhythm " by Ibn Khurdadhbih, 2 if we are to credit the 
assertion that they were unacquainted with metre at this 
time. 3 We certainly know that subsequent to the 
introduction of the ghind al-mutqan, with its rhythms 
into Al-Hijaz, the Persian-minded city of Al-Hira was 
still using the older type of song of the genre of the 
na$b. 

The conflicting claims in the Kitab al-aghdni make 

1 Farmer, Facts for the Arabian Musical Influence, p. 53 
Al-Mas'udI, viii, 90. 

Browne, Sources of Dawlatshdh, in J.R.A.S. (1899), pp. 56, 61, 62. 
Cf. his Literary History of Persia, i, 12-14. 



50 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

it rather difficult to appreciate the actual innovations 
in the ghind' al-mutqan. Ibn al-Kalbi (d. 819), a most 
reliable traditionist, 1 who passed on traditions from his 
father, who was a really scientific enquirer in his way, 
tells us something about the various genres of music. 
He says, " Music (ghind') is in three styles (awjuh) the 
nasb, the sindd, and the hazaj. As for the nasb, it is 
the music of the riders (rukbdri) and the singing-girls 
(qaindf). As for the sindd, it is the heavy refrain, full 
of notes (naghamdt). And as for the hazaj, it is the 
light [song], all of it, and it is that which stirs the hearts 
and excites the forbearing." 2 Evidently it was the 
sindd and hazaj that were introduced in the ghind' 
al-mutqan at the time that we are speaking of. 

In the Kitdb al-aghdni we are informed through a long 
string of authorities ending with Al-Kalbi (d. 763) and 
Abu Miskm, that " the first who sang in Arabic [?] in 
Al-Medlna was Tuwais," and again that " the first 
music (ghind') was his [Tuwais'] music, with the hazaj 
in it " : 

" Love has so emaciated me, 
That through it I am almost melting away." 3 

In another place in the same work (as though it were 
another Tuwais) we are told that Tuwais was " the first 
to sing the ghind' al-mutqan" and that he was the fore- 
most exponent of the hazaj rhythm. 4 The author 
(d. 940) of the ' Iqd al-farid says, " The first of those who 
sang in the time of Islam the graceful music (ghind 9 
al-raqiq) was Tuwais." 6 Finally, the Kitdb al-aghdm 

1 Encyclopedia of Islam, ii, 689. 

1 'Iqd al-farld, iii, 186. Al-Mas'udI (viii, 93) on the authority of Ibn 
Khurdadhbih (ca. 870-92) has a slightly different version. He says : 
" Music (ghind') is the nasb which comprises three genres the rakbdnl 
( *= ghind' al-rukbdn) the sindd or heavy, and the hazaj or light." The 
word nasb appears to have got shifted from its place after genres. 

The passage in the 'Iqd al-farld also occurs in the Mustatraf (i5th 
cent.), ii, 134. Mitjana in Le Monde Orientals (1906, p. 205) attributes 
the tradition in the Mustatraf to Abu Muhammad al-Mundhirl. This 
is an error. The author of the Mustatraf says that it is Abu Mundhir 
Hisham, i.e., Ibn al-Kalbl. In fact, all of the chapters dealing with 
music in the Mustafraf appear to have been lifted from the 'Iqd al-farld. 

Aghdnl, ii, 170. Aghdnl t iv, 38. 'Iqd al-farld t iii, 187. 



THE ORTHODOX KHALIFS 51 

says, " The first in Al-Medma to sing the music intro- 
ducing in it the iqd* (rhythm) was Tuwais." 

It is this last tradition which appears to sum up the 
truth of all the others, and that is that the graceful 
music (ghina' al-raqiq) or artistic music (ghina' al-mutqan) 
was that which employed a new device of rhythmical 
symmetry quite independent of the metrical structure 
of the verse. The first iqd f (rhythm) introduced was the 
hazaj. 

Another claimant for honours in introducing the 
" new music " is 'Azza al-Maila', since it is said that 
" she was the first who sang the rhythmic song (ghina' 
al-mauqi') in Al-Hijaz." 1 Sa'ib Khathir also contributed 
a share to this " new music," and Ibn al-Kalbi says that 
the song commencing : 

" Why are these homes desolated, 
The sport of wind and rain ? " 

which is in the iqa' (rhythm) called thaqil awwal, was the 
first song in the music of the Arabs of artistic and savant 
composition in the days of Islam. 2 These rhythmic 
modes, which became a special feature in Arabian music, 
were soon extended, as we shall see. Meanwhile we turn 
to the melody. 

Music was known by the generic term ghina , which 
primarily meant " song," hence mughann or mughannl 
stood generally for " musician," although in its specific 
sense it implied " singer." Music was also called tarab, 
hence mutrib meant " musician," or from a point of view 
of the stricter Muslim, music was lahw (lit. " entertain- 
ment ") and musical instruments were dubbed malahi. 
Throughout the Kitdb al-aghdm we find the verses 
that were set to music superscribed with the term saut, 
and the word was strictly confined to " vocal music," 
although later it came to be used by the theorists to mean 
"noise" in contradistinction to fawn ("tone") and 
naghma ("musical note"). An interval was called a 

1 Aghanl, xvi, 13. 
vii, t88. 



52 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

nabra in these days, 1 although there were no names for 
the specific intervals, save in the nomenclature of the 
finger-places on the lute, such as mutlaq (" open string "), 
sabbdba (" first finger "), wustd (" second finger "), binsir 
("third finger"), and khinsir ("fourth finger"). It is 
highly probable, however, that the terms for the tonic 
and octave at this period were sajah (shuhdj) and 
iyydh. 2 

The term for melody was lahn, and all serious or artistic 
music was composed in certain melodic modal formulas 
called asdbi' (" fingers," sing. asba 1 ). At first we meet 
with these modes described merely according to their 
majrd or " course." 3 There were two " courses," 
the binsir and wustd. Later, the asdbi' are more clearly 
designated by their tonics. 

III 

Among the names of the great musicians of the first 
days of Islam are a few that have been preserved in song, 
story, verse and proverb among the Arabs, which show 
the high esteem in which they were held. Fortunately, 
we have precise details of their lives from other sources, 
for the most part from that mine of Arabian verse and 
history, the great Kitdb al-aghani. 

The first musician to make a name under Islam was 
Tuwais ("The Little Peacock"), whose full name was 
Abu 'Abd al-Muna"am 'Isa ibn 'Abdallah al-Dha'ib 
(632-710) 4 He was a freeman (mauld) of the Banu 
Makhzum and belonged to Al-Medina, having been 
brought up in the household of Arwa', the mother of 
Khalif 'Uthman. Whilst he was still young, he was 

1 See the definitions in the Taj al-'arus ; Land, Remarks, etc., p. 156. 
Ribera, La mfisica de las cantigas, p. 23. Hasan Husnl 'Abdulwahab, 
Le Developpement de la Musique Arabe en Orient , Espagne et Tunisie 
(Tunis, 1918), p. 5. 

See the Mafdtlh al-'ulum, 240, and Land, Remarks, 157. 

* Aghanl, ii, 171. xvi, 16. 

Freytag, Arab. Prov., xiii, 158. Ibn Khallikan, i, 438. The 
proverb, " More unfortunate than Tuwais " was due to the fact that 
all the great events of his life, his birth, circumcision, marriage, etc., 
happened to fall on the dates when one of the illustrious men of Islam 
died. 



THE ORTHODOX KHALIFS 53 

attracted by the melodies sung by the Persian slaves 
who were employed at Al-Medina, and he imitated their 
style. According to Ibn Badrun, it was in the later years 
of Khalif 'Uthman (644-66) that Tuwais rose to fame. 1 
He is highly esteemed in Arabian annals for his musical 
abilities. Ibn Suraij, his pupil, called him the finest 
singer of his day, whilst he was considered the greatest 
exponent in the hazaj rhythm. We have already seen 
that he is generally credited with being the first to sing 
the " new music " which was introduced in his time. 
According to the Kitdb al-aghdni, he only used the square 
tambourine called the duff in accompanying himself, 
which he carried in a bag, 2 or in his robe. 3 

Like the majority of the first male musicians in Al- 
Medina at this period, he was socially an outcast, by 
reason of his being a mukhannath.* Yet he was highly 
esteemed by the nobility. When Mu'awiya I (661-80) 
ascended to the Khalifate, Marwan ibn al-Hakam, the 
governor of Al-Medina, offered a reward for every 
mukhannath that was delivered into his hands. One of 
these, Al-Naghashi, was put to death. 6 Tuwais sought 
refuge at Suwaida on the road to Syria. Here, the old 
musician remained until his death, full of bitterness that 
his musical reputation had not exempted him from the 
edict of Marwan the governor. Among his pupils were 
Ibn Suraij, Al-Dalal Nafidh, Nauma al-Duha, and Fand. 6 

Sa'ib Khathir (d. 683) or more properly, Abu Ja'far 
Sa'ib ibn Yassar, was the son of a Persian slave in the 
service of the Laith family of Al-Medina. Given his 
freedom, he entered commercial life, and in his leisure 
hours he attended the weekly concerts of the na'ihdt 
(female singers of elegies), which gave him an ambition 

1 Ibn Badrun, 64. 

*'Iqd al-farld, iii, 186. Aghanl ii, 174. 

4 Hence the proverb, " More effeminate than Tuwais." Freytag, 
Arab. Prov. t vii, 124. 

* Aghanl, ii, 171. Tuwais was scarcely the first mukhannath in 
Al-Medina as this author says. Cf. Al-Bukharl, iv, 32. Al-TirmidhI, i, 
271. Ibn al-Ath!r, Usd al-ghaba, iv, 268. 

Aghanl , ii, 170-76. iv, 38-9. ' Iqd al-farld, iii, 1 86. Ibn Khallikan, 
ii, 438. Guidi makes out that there were two musicians named 
Tuwais. 

E 



54 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

to be a singer. Devoting himself to the art, he made such 
progress that one day, a noble of the Quraish, 'Abdallah 
ibn Ja'far, hearing him sing, took him into his service. 
At this time, following the practice of untutored musicians, 
he merely accompanied himself with the qadib or wand, 
but he soon abandoned this for the 'ud (lute), and he is 
credited with being the first in Al-Medina to accompany 
his songs with this instrument. When Nashit the Persian 
became the rage on account of his national airs, Sa'ib 
showed that he could sing the same to Arabic verse. 
He is also reputed to have been the originator of the 
thaqll awwal rhythm, and the first song in which he used 
it is esteemed to be the first song in Arabian music of 
artistic composition. 

When his protector, 'Abdallah ibn Ja'far, visited 
Khalif Mu'awiya I (661-80) at Damascus, he took Sa'ib 
with him. As this khalif was influenced by the conven- 
tional ban on music, 'Abdallah had to introduce this 
musician to court as a poet who " embellished " his verse. 
After Sa'ib had given a display of his singing, which his 
protector had called " embellished verse," the khalif 
rewarded Sa'ib with a present. During the reign of 
Yazid I, the people of Al-Medina revolted, and an army 
was sent against the rebels. One of the first innocent 
victims of the soldiery after the battle of Al-Harra 
(683) was the musician Sa'ib Khathir. Sa'ib had four 
eminent pupils 'Azza al Maila', Ibn Suraij, Jamila, 
and Ma'bad. 1 

'Azza al-Maila' (d. ca. 705) received her cognomen on 
account of her figure. She was a handsome half-caste 
of Al-Medina, and was a pupil of an old songstress named 
Ra'iqa, who taught her the music of olden days, such as 
had been sung or played by Slrin, Zirnab, Khaula, Al- 
Rabab and Salma. Later she learned some of the 
Persian airs from Nashit and Sa'ib Khathir. As a young 
woman, we find her with her teacher, Ra'iqa, and the 
poet Hassan ibn Thabit (d. ca. 674) at the best festivities 
in Al-Medma. This was in the reign of 'Uthman. The 
weekly concerts at her house attracted a throng of 

*Aghanl t vii, 188-90. 



THE ORTHODOX KHALIFS 55 

dilettanti, and her influence was felt even at Mecca. 1 
Tuwais, who attended these concerts, testified that 
" the most complete propriety was observed at them." 
Strict silence was demanded from the audience, and the 
slightest misbehaviour was reproved by a stroke with a 
stick. 2 

The extraordinary popularity of 'Azza al-Maila' 
scandalized the stricter Muslims, and during the reign 
of Mu'awiya I (661-80) they complained to Sa'id ibn 
al-'As, the governor of Al-Medina, who would have upheld 
their grievance had not the great art patron, 'Abdallah 
ibn Ja'far intervened. Many poets and musicians sang 
her praises. Hassan ibn Thabit said that her performances 
reminded him of the artistic music at the Ghassanid 
court in the " Days of Idolatry/' Tuwais said that she 
was the " Queen of Singers/' Although she made a 
speciality of playing the mizhar and mi'zafa, which were 
the instruments of the olden days, we have it on the 
authority of Ma'bad that she excelled in playing the 
*ud. The date of her death has not been recorded, but 
she died before 710. 3 There was a later songstress named 
Na'ila bint al-Maila', who was probably her daughter. 4 

Nashit was a Persian slave in the service of 'Abdallah 
ibn Ja'far, who freed him later. He created a furore 
in Al-Medina on account of his Persian melodies, and 
Arab singers were compelled to adopt Persian airs for 
their repertory in consequence. At the same time, 
Nashit had to take lessons from Sa'ib Khathir in order 
to learn the Arabian melodies, so as to keep pace with 
his rivals. Nashit had the honour of being one of the 
teachers of 'Azza al-Maila' and Ma'bad. 5 We read of 
a Hammad ibn Nashit, who appears to have been his 
son. 6 

Hunain al-Hiri was the usual name given to Abu 
Ka'b Hunain ibn Ballu' al-Hiri (d. ca. 718). As his name 
implies, he was a native of Al-Hira, and he appears to 
have been an Arab of the Banu'l-Harith ibn Ka'b, and 

1 Aghanl, x, 55. 

1 Aghanl, xvi, 14. We read of the same custom in Plato's Laws, 700. 

Aghanl> xvi, 13-20. 'Aghanl, v, 176 

Aghanl, vii, 188. Aghanl, iv, 61. 



56 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

a Christian, which partly explains why he, an Arab, is 
to be found among the purveyors of this illicit calling of 
music. As a young man he followed the employment of 
a flower-seller, and this took him to the houses of the 
nobility and wealthy classes, where he became infatuated 
with the performances of the singing-girls, until one 
day he decided to become a musician. After studying 
under good masters, 1 he became a first-rate performer 
on the ( ud, an excellent singer, and a composer of repute. 
He was the first in Al-'Iraq in the time of Islam, to cul- 
tivate the artistic song in the sindd genre, his predecessors, 
we are told, having been satisfied with the hazaj, which 
was, at this time, little different from the nab in Al-'Iraq. 

Hunain must have started his career in the time of 
'Uthman (644-56) at least. During the reign of 'Abd 
al-Malik (685-705), the governor of Al-'Iraq, Khalid ibn 
'Abdallah al-Qasri, interdicted music and musicians, 
but owing to the reputation of Hunain, the latter was 
permitted to follow his avocation, provided that no bad 
or dissolute characters were admitted to audition. 
When Bishr ibn Marwan, the brother of Khalif 'Abd 
al-Malik, became governor, the edict was rescinded and 
Hunain was summoned to his palace at Al-Kufa, where 
he remained in constant attendance on this prince. 

About the year 718, the virtuosi of Al-Hijaz, desiring 
to pay their respects to their venerable confrere of 
Al-'Iraq, invited him to Mecca. Here, an illustrious 
gathering of musicians, poets and dilettanti received him 
with pomp and ceremony. At the residence of Sukaina 
bint al-Husain, a liberal patroness of music, a grand 
musical fete was prepared, and during its progress a 
gallery which had become overcrowded with the audience 
collapsed, and the aged Hunain was killed. On the author- 
ity of his son 'Ubaidallah, Hunain al-HIri is to be ranked 
among " the four great singers " of Islam. 2 

Ahmad al-Nasibi, or Ahmad ibn Usama al-Hamdani, 
belonged to Al-Kufa. It seems that he began his musical 

1 'Umar al-Wadl and Hakam al-Wadl are mentioned as the teachers 
of Hunain, but their dates preclude the possibility of this. 
Aghdnl, ii, 120-27. Cf. post. p. 80. 



THE ORTHODOX KHALIFS 57 

career during the " Orthodox " Khalifate. He was an 
Arab, and a kinsman of the poet A'sha Hamdan (d. 702), 
whose companion he was. His singing of the poet's 
verses brought him fame. He was a master of the type of 
song called the nasb, and it was due to him that it was 
introduced into serious music. Apparently, he was the 
first in the days of Islam to make a name as a performer 
on the tunbur (pandore). He became the minstrel and 
boon companion of 'Ubaidallah ibn Ziyad (d. 685), who 
was governor of Al-Kufa. Although Jahza al-Barmaki 
the author of the Kitdb al-tunburiyym speaks of him with 
contempt, the author of the Kitdb al-aghdni says that 
he was unrivalled as a composer and performer on the 
tunbur.' 1 

Qand of Al-Medma was another of the musicians of 
the " first period," says the 'Iqd al-farid. He was a 
freeman of Sa'd ibn Abi Waqqas (d. 670) and 'A'isha 
the " Mother of the Faithful," was particularly attached 
to him. Sa'd once thrashed Qand, and this so enraged 
'A'isha that she refused to speak to the noble Quraishite 
until he had begged the musician's pardon. Qand was 
alive as late as the appointment of Sa'id ibn al-'A 
(d. 672-78) to the governorship of Al-Medina. 2 

Fand or Find, sometimes called Abu Zaid, was a freeman 
of 'A'isha bint Sa'd. He was a man of debauched 
character, although a fine musician. His remissness 
passed into the proverb, " More delaying than Fand/' 3 
He lived to take part in the famous Jamila pilgrimage 
in the days of the Umayyads. 4 

Al-Dalal Nafidh 6 Abu Yazid belonged to Al-Medina 
and was a freeman of the Banu Fahm. He was also in 
the service of 'A'isha bint Sa'd. Khalif 'Abd al-Malik 
(685-705) favoured him, for he was a fine musician and 

*AghZnl, v, 161-4. 

1 Aghanf, vii, 135. 'Iqd al-farid, Hi, 189. Cf. Qa'Id mentioned by 
Von Hammer, Lit. der Arab., ii, 705. 

* Freytag, Arab. Prov., ii, 159. iii, 81. 

4 Agh&nl, xvi, 60-1. vii, 135. Fand and the preceding Qand would 
appear to be the same person. 

Written Al-Dallal by De Meynard and Freytag. Cf . Kosegarten 
Lib. Cant., and Lane, Lexicon, sub " khanatha. The Sasi edition of 
the Aghdnl has Nafid, and Von Hammer says Naqid. 



58 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

had studied under Tuwais. Like his teacher, he was a 
mukhannath, and he is pilloried by Al-Maidam in the pro- 
verb, " More effeminate than Al-Dalal." His melodies 
were imitated a century later by one of the most famous 
of Arab musicians Ibrahim al-Mausili. 1 

Budaih al-Malih was a freeman of 'Abdallah ibn 
Ja'far (d. 699) together with Nafi' al-Khair and Nauma 
al-Duha. All of these musicians took part in the Jamila 
pilgrimage. Nauma al-Duha was taught by Tuwais, 
and Nafi' al-Khair was at the courts of Mu'awiya I 
(661-80) and Yazid I (680-3). 2 

In Al-'Iraq were some lesser known musicians Zaid 
ibn al-Talis, Zaid ibn Ka'b and Malik ibn Hamama. 3 

* Aghanl, iv, 59-73. vii, 137. ' Iqd al-farid, iii, 187. Freytag, 
Arab. Prov., vii, 96. 

* Aghanl, xiv, Q-II. iii, 86. vii, 103, 104, 135. Cf. iv, 61, 129 
(Hablb Nauma al Duha). 'Iqd al-farld, 111, 186. 

' 8 Aghanl, ii, 125. 



CHAPTER IV 

THE UMAYYADS 
(A.D. 661-750) 

"There is no true joy but in lending ear to music." 1 

Khalif Al-Walid II. 

THE Khalifate fell to the house of Umayya on the death 
of 'AH (661). Although the Umayyads ruled for nearly 
a century, the stricter Muslims looked upon them as 
usurpers, not merely because they came of the Pagan 
aristocracy of " unbelieving Mecca " that had withstood 
the Prophet, but on account of their worldly ways. 
Yet it was under this dynasty that the Arabian empire 
and Muslim civilization entered upon a path of glory. 
The Khalifate extended its dominions eastward as far as 
the Oxus and Indus, and westward as far as the Atlantic 
and the Pyrenees. Indeed, it has well been said that 
where the Orthodox khalifs had made Islam a religion, 
the Umayyads had created it an empire. 2 

The removal of the capital from Al-Medina to Damascus, 
where it remained practically for the whole of the 
Umayyad period, was not an auspicious event politically, 
although culturally it made for progress. The wider 
influence brought to intellectual life by closer contact 
with Byzantium and Persia, lifted the people beyond the 
confines of Islam and the insularity of Arabia. The 
circumstance eventually re-acted on European culture 
generally, for the Arabs became the pioneers of that 
regeneration of culture which led to the Renaissance. 3 

1 Nicholson, Risdlat al-ghufran (J.R.A.S., 1902), and Literary History 
of the Arabs, 206. 

2 Jurjl Zaidan, 74. 

1 See my Arabian Influence on Musical Theory (1925). 

59 



60 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

1 

Mu'awiya I (661-80) was a ruler of literary and artistic 
tastes. 1 " He assembled at his court all who were most 
distinguished by scientific acquirements ; he surrounded 
.himself with poets ; and as he had subjected to his 
[dominion many of the Grecian isles and provinces, the 
sciences of Greece first began, under him, to obtain an 
influence over the Arabs/' 2 Yet although the khalif 
was susceptible to the charms of poetry, and his badawi 
wife Maisun was an accomplished poetess, he appears 
to have been swayed by the conventional ban against 
artistic music. 3 His governors frequently interdicted 
the art, and we know that when 'Abdallah ibn Ja'far 
wished to introduce a certain musician at court, he had 
to plead that the latter was a " poet/' because the 
khalif pretended that he had no idea of music and had 
never admitted a musician into his presence. 4 Yet the 
khalif was pleased with the performance of the so-called 
" poet/' who happened to be Sa'ib Khathir, one of the 
foremost musicians of his day, who did not deliver 
" poetry " but sang before the khalif ! Towards the end 
of his reign, Mu'awiya heard this musician once more in 
Al-Medma, and rewarded him with a present. 

Yazid I (680-83) was the son of Maisun, and it is no 
wonder therefore that he had such inordinate tastes 
for poetry and music. He was himself a poet of no mean 
order, 5 and Al-Mas'udi says that he was "appassioned 
for music (tarab),"* whilst in the Kitdb al-aghani we read 
that he was " the first to introduce musical instruments 
(maldhi) and singers into the court." 7 The strict Muslims 

1 Al-Mas'udT, v, 77. 

* Sismondi, i, 50. 

3 Al-Tabarl, ii, 214. There was music of a kind at court, such as 
the singing-girls provided. This we know from the pathetic song of 
the khahf's wife Maisun who longed for the desert tent instead of the 
gilded court, 

" The wind's voice where the hill-path went 
Was more than tambourine [s] can be." 

(Quoted by Nicholson, Lit. Hist, of the Arabs, 195.) 
Cf. 'Iqd al-fand, i, 318. iii, 238. 
1 Lammens, iii, 193. 

Al-Mas'udl, v, 156. 
7 Aghanl, xvi, 70. 



THE UMAYYADS 61 

were scandalized at the " ungodliness of the court 
wine and music, singing-men and singing-women, cock- 
fighting and hounds." 1 

Mu'awiya II (683-84) and Marwan (684-85) only occu- 
pied the throne for a year, too brief a space to have any 
appreciable influence on the culture of the period. The 
latter, however, banished all the mukhannathun from 
Al-Medma when he was its governor as a prince, including 
the famous musician Tuwais. 

'Abd al-Malik (685-705) gave general encouragement 
to music and letters. He was " a composer of no mean 
merit," and he " encouraged poets with a princely 
liberality." 2 Both Ibn Misjah and Budaih al-Malih, 
the best known musicians of the time, were patronized by 
him. At the same time, so as to display some appearance 
of " orthodoxy," he appears to have made a pretence 
not only to be ignorant of music, but even to disapprove 
of it. Before his courtiers, he censured music as " de- 
basing to manliness, and ruinous to dignity and honour," 
but he was taken to task by 'Abdallah ibn Ja'far for this 
opinion. 3 Again, in the Halbat al-kumait, it is said that 
'Abd al-Malik once simulated unacquaintance with the 
purpose of the *ud (lute), but a freely-spoken courtier 
answered that everyone present was fully informed 
about the instrument, and no one more so than the 
khalif himself, at which sally 'Abd al-Malik was much 
amused. From the Kitab al-aghdni we know that the 
khalif was sufficiently well acquainted with music to be 
able to ask for the hudd', the ghind' al-rukbdn, and the 
ghind' al-mutqan. The khalif s brother, Bishr ibn Mar- 
wan, was a staunch patron of music. 

Al-Walid I (705-15) reigned during a most eventful 
period. The banner of Islam was planted within the 
confines of China in the east, and on the shores of the 
Atlantic in the west. The Mediterranean was crossed, 
and the foundations of a western khalifate were laid in 
Spain. " In his reign," says Muir, " culture and the 

iMuir, Caliphate, 314. 

Muir, Caliphate, 344. Al-Mas'udI, v, 310. 

'Iqd al-farld t iii, 198. 



62 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

arts began to flourish." 1 The cultivation of music, in 
spite of the high-handed measures of some of his gover- 
nors, progressed by leaps and bounds. The chief musi- 
cians of Mecca and Al-Medma, Ibn Suraij and Ma'bad, 
were summoned to the court at Damascus, where they 
were received with even greater appreciation and honour 
than the poets. The khalif's favourite minstrel was 
Abu Kamil al-Ghuzayyil, who, he declared, was indis- 
pensable to him. 2 

Sulaiman (715-17) was a man of pleasure. Music was 
for him not an art to be sought for itself alone, but as a 
mere concomitant with the joys of the feast or hanm. 
The singing-girls alone had his attention. 3 When he was 
a prince, however, he had displayed a predilection for 
music, since he was keen enough to offer a prize for com- 
petition among the musicians of Mecca, and this during 
a pilgrimage ! The first prize of 10,000 pieces of silver 
was carried off by Ibn Suraij, whilst a like amount was 
distributed among the other competitors. 4 

'Umar II (717-20) brought a change to the Khalifate. 
He was pious and to some extent a bigot. The result 
was that " poets, orators, and such-like soon found that 
his court was no place for them, while it was thronged 
by godly and devout divines." 5 Compared with his 
predecessors, it became a proverbial expression among 
the Arabs that whilst Al-Walid I was for art, and Sulaiman 
was for women, 'Umar II was for piety.* Yet before he 
came to the throne he was not only fond of music, but was 
actually a composer. In the Kitab al-aghdm he is 
claimed to have been the first khalif who composed songs, 
and the words and " modes " of these compositions are 
mentioned. 7 This was when 'Umar was governor of 
Al-Hijaz, and surrounded by a music-loving aristocracy. 
When he became khalif, however, listening to music 
was forbidden. It came to his notice on one occasion 
that a judge (qddl) of Al-Medina had become a veritable 
slave to the accomplishments of one of his singing-girls. 

Muir, Caliphate. 361. Aghanl, vi, 144. 

Cf. Aghanl, iv, 60-2. Aghanl , i, 126. 

Muir, Caliphate, 369. Fakhvl, 173. T Aghanl , viii, 149-50. 



THE UMAYYADS 63 

The khalif decided to dismiss him from office, but first 
sent for both the judge and his singing-girl. When they 
appeared before him, the latter was commanded to sing. 
The khalif was deeply moved by the charm of her voice 
and the sentiment of her song, and turning to the judge 
he said, " Thy crime is nothing. Return to thy post, 
and may Allah guide thee." 1 

Yazid II (720-24) brought back music and poetry to 
the court and public life, although he went to the very 
opposite extreme from his predecessor. Like his uncle,. 
Yazid I, he was a man " without religion " according 
to the orthodox annalists, and he cultivated music and 
the song on every hand. Ibn Suraij, Ma'bad, Malik, 
Ibn 'A'isha, Al-Baidhaq al-Ansan, Ibn Abi Lahab and 
other musicians, were treated with generous bounty at his 
court. Here, too, we see the lavish favours bestowed 
on the singing-girls Sallama al-Qass and Habbaba, who 
played important roles in political as well as musical 
affairs during his reign. Yazid was utterly free from 
religious prejudices. The singer Ibn Abi Lahab, who had 
pleased the khalif with his singing one day was asked 
by whom he had been taught. The musician replied, 
" My father/' Yazid replied, " If you had received no 
other heritage than this song, your father left you a 
considerable fortune. 1 ' "But," urged the singer, "my 
father was an infidel and an enemy of the Prophet all 
his life ! " "I know," said Yazid, " yet he was such an 
excellent musician that I have a certain sympathy for 
him." 2 Some of this khalif 's verses have been pre- 
served. 3 

Hisham (724-43) had a prosperous reign and it was 
" one of the most exemplary of the Khalif ate either before 
or after," says Muir. 4 Of his attitude towards music 
during his occupancy of the throne, we get no information 
in the Kitdb al-aghdm, although we know that he had 
musicians at court. Whilst he was a prince, he patronized 
the doyen of the musicians of Al-'Iraq, Hunain al-HIri, 

Al-Mas'udI, v, 428. 

Al-Mas'udI, v, 449. 

Aghanl, xiii, 161. 

4 Muir, Caliphate, 399. He abstained from wine (nabldh). 



64 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

during a pilgrimage even, 1 which would lead one to de- 
duce that he was not quite in agreement with the con- 
ventional proscription. 2 Bar Hebraeus 3 tells us that 
Hisham once admitted that he did not know the differ- 
ence between a pandore (tunbur) and a lute (barbat), 
but this story probably belongs to the same class as those 
told of other khalifs. (See ante p. 61). 

Al-Walid II (743-44) cared little for political life, and 
it was from this time that the fortunes of the House of 
Umayya began to wane. Like Yazid I, Al-Walid I, 
and Yazid II, this khalif was absorbed in pleasure and was 
an open-handed patron of the arts. Al-Mas'udi says 
" He loved music (ghind') and was the first to support 
musicians from abroad, showing publicly his pleasure 
in the wine-cup, the revels (maldhi) and the stringed 
instrument ( ( azf). . . . The cultivation of music spread not 
only among the leisured class, but with the people also, 
whilst the singing-girls became the rage/' 4 At his court, 
musicians from all parts were welcomed with open arms, 
and among them : Ma'bad, 'Atarrad, Malik, Ibn 'A'isha, 
Dahman (al-Ashqar ?), 'Umar al-Wadi, Hakam al-Wadi, 
Yunus al-Katib, Al-Hudhali, Al-Abjar, Ash'ab ibn 
Jablr, Abu Kamil al-Ghuzayyil and Yahya Qail. The 
khalif himself was a born artiste, and he excelled in both 
music and poetry, as we know from the Kitab al-aghani, 
where a chapter is devoted to his accomplishments in 
these arts. Besides being an excellent singer and a 
performer on the 'ud (lute) and the tall (drum), he was a 
composer. 5 Unfortunately, he plunged into excesses, 
and this " alienated from him the regard of all the 
better classes." 8 This gave the 'Abbasid faction, the 
enemy of the House of Umayya, the opportunity to fur- 
ther their propaganda against the "ungodly usurpers," 

1 Aghant, ii, 121. 

His reproof of Ibn 'A'isha for singing (Aghdnl, xiii, 127) was only 
because it interfered with the progress of a caravan. Similarly his 
punishment of Yunus al-Katib was not on account of music, but because 
the words libelled a lady. 

Bar Hebraeus, 207. 

Al-Mas'udi, vi, 4. 

Aghdnl, viii, 161-2. 

Muir, Caliphate, 403. 



THE UMAYYADS 65 

as they termed the Umayyads. The reign of Al-Walid II 
was short, but a great deal was done for music during 
those fleeting years. " The love of music/' said Sayyid 
Amir 'All, " grew almost into a craze, and enormous 
sums were spent on famous singers and musicians." 1 

Yazld III (744) only reigned six months. He appears 
to have been equally favourable towards music, and he 
instructed his governor of Khurasan, Nasr ibn Sayyar, 
to furnish him with " every kind of musical instrument," 
as well as a number of singing-girls. 2 On the other hand, 
Al-Ghazali hands down the saying attributed to this 
khalif, which bespeaks rigid orthodoxy on the question 
of " listening to music." Yazld III is credited with these 
words: "Beware of singing for it maketh modesty to be 
lacking and increaseth lust and ruineth manly virtue ; 
and verily it takes the place of wine and does what 
drunkenness does ; and if ye cannot avoid having to do 
with it, keep it out of the way of women, for singing 
incites to fornication." 3 

Marwan II (744-50) was the last of the Umayyad 
khalifs in the East. The whole of his reign was taken up 
with internecine strife, which enabled the 'Abbasids, 
whose seat was in Khurasan, to raise the standard of 
revolt. On the 25th January, 750, the famous battle of 
the Zab was fought. It sealed the fate of the Umayyads 
and culminated in the death of Marwan II. It was the 
end, too, of the purely Arabian period in the national 
music, which, in spite of Persian and Byzantine in- 
fluences, seems to have held its own during the reign of 
the Umayyads. For a continuation of the old art we 
have to turn to the west, where a scion of the House of 
Umayya was to raise a sultanate and Khalif ate in a land 
known as Al-Andalus (Spain). 



The indifference of the Umayyads towards Islam 
augured well for musical art. The new khalifs represented 

* Syed Ameer All, Short History. 
Muir, Caliphate, 406. 

Al-Ghazali, op. cit., 248-9. 



66 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

the old Pagan ideas of the Arabs, and so far as they had 
any religion, says Muir, they were Unitarians, " and so 
might be called Muslims ; but in the matter of drinking 
wine and most other things, they set Islam at naught." 1 
Among the " other things " was music, and indeed the 
Muslim purists did not forget to include music among 
the " sins " of the Umayyads. Al-Hasan al-Basrl (d. 
(728), a contemporary theologian, said concerning 
Mu'awiya I, the least unorthodox of the Umayyads 
save 'Umar II, that he deserved damnation on four 
points, one of them being that he had left the Khalifate 
to Yazid I, who was " a wine drinker, a player of the 
funbur (pandore) and a wearer of silken garments." 2 
Yet we need give credit to but a tithe of the stories about 
the profligacy of the Umayyads, since the 'Abbasid 
hatred of this dynasty accounts for many a canard. 

With the exception of the reigns of Mu'awiya I, 'Abd 
al-Malik and 'Umar II, the courts were thronged with 
musicians both male and female, and the greatest en- 
couragement given to the art. The honours showered 
upon singers and instrumentalists and the largesses 
bestowed can only be equalled in the " Golden Age " 
of the ' Abbasids. The Umayyads, however, had political 
as well as artistic reasons for these favours. It was the 
singer who, by setting the panegyrics and satires of the 
court poets to music, reached the ear of the populace. 3 
As Lammens says, the singer and the poet were the jour- 
nalists of their day. 4 A poet like Jarir might affect 
to look down on the singer as he does in his Naqd'id, 
but it was readily acknowledged that a poem set to music 
had greater potency than when it was delivered by a mere 
reciter (rze*). 6 Singers journeying from town to town 
and tribe to tribe passed on their songs which were taken 
up even by the singers in the caravans. 6 All this helped 
to consolidate the body politic as well as art. 

Muir, Caliphate, 431. Nicholson (Lit. Hist, of the Arabs) says: 
" They had little enough religion of any sort/' For their contempt of 
the Qur'dn and the Holy places, see Jurji Zaidan, 102. 

1 Al-Tabarl, ii, 146. 

Aghanl, ii, 153. 

4 Lammens, ii, 146. 

Aghanl, iii, 124. Aghanl, ii, 153. 



THE UMAYYADS 67 

Music and musicians had won back, to some extent, 
their places of esteem and honour in the social life of the 
Arabs which had once been theirs. Music was no longer 
an avocation for mere slaves, since we find freemen 
(mawdli) of good social standing and possession making 
music their profession. Yunus al-Katib, an official in the 
municipal adminstration of Al-Medina, took up this 
vocation. We also see a musician named Burdan being 
appointed to a lucrative municipal post. 1 Even whilst 
it must be admitted that most of the professionals came 
from the freeman class, for the most part Persians by 
extraction, yet there were Arabs who did not think it 
beneath their dignity to be professional musicians, and 
among them Malik, himself one of the aristocracy. 

Yet musicians formed a class apart. This was not due 
to any official measure such as operated in Persia under 
the Sasanids, 2 but was merely on account of the ban of 
Islam, and strengthened somewhat by craft consciousness. 
At first, looked upon as vagabonds, like the mediaeval 
minstrels of Europe, musicians were naturally forced into 
a separate class, which assumed something of the nature 
of a brotherhood, just as in Europe they were compelled 
to form guilds. The leading musicians appear to have 
made rather comfortable livings. They were in constant 
demand at court, the houses of the nobility and the rich 
bourgeoisie, as well as at the innumerable festivities 
connected with Islam and social life generally. 3 Some 
of the virtuosi turned their residences into conservatories 
of music, where the rich dilettanti spent their leisure hours, 
and where they sent their singing-girls to be trained, 
for no house could be without its singing-girl. 

The custom of audition at this period is of considerable 
interest. At the Umayyad court, whilst the khalif ob- 
served the Sasanid custom 4 of having a thin curtain 
between the performers and himself during audition, 

*Aghanl, vii, 168. Al-Mas'udf, ii, 157. 

* The " presents " bestowed on musicians are possibly exaggerated 
in some cases, but we must remember the Arab proverb, " Singing 
without silver is like a corpse without perfume." Burckhardt, Arab. 
Prov., 464. 

Al-Mas'udI, ii, 158. 



68 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

this does not appear to have always been the case, except 
when the ladies of the harim were with him. Even then, 
instances are given where the curtain was raised. 1 There 
were occasions indeed, when the musician performed 
face to face with his audience, and on one occasion actually 
occupied the same couch as the khalif. 2 Outside the 
court the musician was under no such restriction. Of 
course, the singing-girls, both at court and in private 
households, did not usually entertain guests without the 
customary curtain, although we read of some strange 
anomalies in this respect. The famous songstress, 
Jamila, prepared a fete for 'Abdallah ibn Ja'far and his 
entourage, in which the singing-girls who were studying 
at her house took a prominent part. The latter were 
gaily attired and performed without any curtain and in 
full view of the audience. 3 On the other hand, at her 
famous fete during the pilgrimage which the Kitab 
al-agham makes so much of, we read that the singing- 
girls performed behind a curtain. 4 Again, in the house 
of 'A'isha bint Talha, we find the songstress 'Azza al- 
Maila' singing to the wives of the Quraish nobles, the whole 
of them being hidden from the men by a curtain. 5 Yet 
on another occasion we find Ibn Suraij and 'Azza al- 
Maila/ singing together at the house of Sukaina bint 
al-Husain before the entire company quite openly. 6 

Perhaps the great musical advantage of the Umayyad 
period was gained on the theoretical side. According to 
Al-Mas'udi, it was not until the reign of Yazid I (680-83) 
that music began to be seriously cultivated in Mecca 
and Al-Medina. 7 This might very well be true of Mecca, 
but certainly not of Al-Medina and elsewhere. Mecca, 
since the departure of the Umayyads for Syria, had 
fallen into strict orthodoxy, whilst Al-Medina seems always 
to have maintained a more healthy secular outlook. 8 
Mecca, at any rate, was later in its musical revival than 

1 Aghanl, m, 99. * Aghanl, i, 117. Aghanl t vii, 1444 

Aghanl, vii, 135. Aghanl, x, 55. 

Aghanl, xv, 131-2. See 'Iqd al-farld, iii, 198, where instances are 
given of singing-girls performing openly before guests. 

7 Al-Mas'udi, v, 157. Jurjl Zaidan, 139, repeats this assertion. 

Cf . the opinion of Ibn al-Kirriya (Ibn Khallikan) Biog. JDict., i, 239 



THE UMAYYADS 69 

Al-Medma. During the " Orthodox Khalifate," most of 
the musicians belonged to Al-Medina, which, of course, 
might have been due to the fact that it was the capital. 
Now, however, Mecca begins to produce musicians to 
rival Al-Medina (and a rivalry did seriously exist), and 
it is Mecca that gives Arabian music its first schooled 
exponent in the person of Ibn Misjah. 

When last we saw the musicians of Al-Medina, 
they were being captivated by the Persian melodies of 
the slaves. During the reign of Mu'awiya I (661-80), 
Persian slaves were brought from Al-'Iraq to work on 
the buildings being erected at Mecca, and their singing 
immediately attracted attention just as it had already 
charmed the people of Al-Medina. The first to take 
advantage of this exotic art was Ibn Misjah, who is claimed 
to have been the " first who sang the Arabian song copied 
from the Persians," or again that he was the " first who 
transferred the Persian song (ghind*) into the Arabian 
song." 1 More important perhaps were the other inno- 
vations of Ibn Misjah. 

It is highly probable that the Arabs of Al-HIra and 
Ghassan possessed the Pythagorean scale, although those 
of Al-Hijaz still retained the old scale of the tunbur al- 
mizam. When Al-Nadr ibn al-Harith introduced the 
*ud (lute) from Al-HIra about the close of the 6th century, 
some foretaste of the Pythagorean scale may have been 
introduced at the same time. 2 Yet there is no certainty 
on this question. All that we know is that the Arabs of 
Al-Hijaz had a system of music that was different from 
that of Byzantium and Persia. We get this information 
in the life of Ibn Mis j ah already mentioned. This musician, 
we are told, was responsible for grafting sundry " foreign " 
musical ideas upon the native practice. Here is the whole 
passage from the Kitab al-aghdm* : 

" In Syria, he [Ibn Misjah] learned the melodies 
(alhari) of Byzantium and received instruction from 
the barbiton players (barbatiyya) and the theorists 
(astukhusiyya) . He then turned to Persia, where he 

1 Aghanl, iii, 84-5. See ante pp. 5, 19. * Aghdnl, iii, 84. 

F 



70 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

learned much of their song (ghina'}, as well as the art 
of accompaniment. Returning to Al-Hijaz, he chose 
the most advantageous of the modes (nagham) of these 
countries, and rejected what was disagreeable, for 
instance, the intervals (ndbaraf) and modes (nagham), 
which he found in the song (ghina) of the Persians 
and Byzantines, which were alien to the Arabian song. 
And he sang [henceforth] according to this method, 
and he was the first to demonstrate this [method] 
and after this the people followed him in this." 1 

Strange to say, his pupil, Ibn Muhriz, is credited with 
a similar service to Arabian music. Like his master, 
he too travelled in Persia and Syria, where he learned 
the melodies (alhan) and song (ghina) of the Persians 
and Byzantines. " Then," says the author of the Kitdb 
al-aghani, " he laid aside from these what he did not 
consider good in the modes (nagham), and by a careful 
melange he composed in this way songs (aghani) which 
were set to the poetry of the Arabs, the like of which 
had not been heard before." 2 

What was actually borrowed from Persia and Byzan- 
tium we cannot be sure of. We certainly know that 
benefit was derived from the Persian contact on the in- 
strumental side. The word dastdn is Persian for " fret," 
and this was borrowed by the Arabs for their finger- 
places on the finger-board of the 'ud (lute) and tunbur 
(pandore). Further, there are reasons for believing that 
the Arabs altered their accordatura of the 'ud to the 
Persian method. The old Arabian accordatura appears 
to have been C-D-G-a, but with the new Persian method 
it was tuned A-D-G-c. This probably accounts for the 
Persian names zlr and bamm being given to the first and 
fourth strings whilst the second and third, which had not 
been touched, retained their Arabic names of mathnd 
and mathlath.* 

1 See my Facts for the Arabian Musical Influence, p. 57, and Ap- 
pendix 23. 

" See the Burhdn-i qdti', sub " si lahn." Mafatlh al-ulum, 238. 
See also my article " The Old Persian Musical Modes " in the J.R.A.S. 
January, 1926. 

* Cf. Land, Remarks, 161-2, and my Facts for the Arabian Musical 
Influence, Appendix, 24. 



THE UMAYYADS 71 

What was gained from Byzantine theory or practice 
is equally uncertain. The general principles of the 
Byzantine theorists (astukhusiyya) 1 could scarcely have 
been borrowed, or at least not much, since one of the 
Al-Kindi treatises informs us that the system of the 
astukhusiyya of Byzantium was different from that of the 
Arabs. 2 Probably the Pythagorean system was more 
rigidly fixed owing to this Byzantine influence, and 
perhaps the two " Courses " (sing, majra) were also of the 
same origin, although they may, indeed, have already been 
known, and may have belonged to ancient Semitic 
teachings. 3 

Yet whilst a considerable alien influence was at work 
in Arabian music, we must not forget however that this 
was a period of strong national feelings, when the old 
Pagan ideals were gloried in. 4 As Land points out, 
" the Persian and Byzantine importations did not supersede 
the national music, but were engrafted upon an Arabic 
root with a character of its own." 5 

The rhythmic and melodic modes now appear in a more 
definite form than we saw them during the " Orthodox 
Khalifate." Six rhythmic modes (iqd'dt) are mentioned 
at this period the thaqil awwal, thaqtl thdni, khafif 
thaqll, hazaj, ramal and ramal tunbun. Two of these 
were invented during the Umayyad period, since the 
ramal was introduced by Ibn Muhriz. 6 

The melodic modes (asdbi') were classified according 
to their " course " (majra), as either in the binsir (third 
finger, i.e., with the Major Third) or wustd (middle finger, 
i.e., with the Minor Third). 

The " courses " had their species named after their 

1 See Professor D.S.Margoliouth's remarks in J.R.A .S., July, 1925. My 
opinion as there expressed was based on the assumption of Kosegarten 
(Lib. Cant., 34), but the appearance of the word in Al-Kindi as quoted 
below, leads me to prefer the meaning of " theorists " for astukhusiyya 



Al-Kindi, Berlin MS. t 5530, fol. 30. See my article " Some 
Musical MSS. Identified," in J.R.A. S., January, 1926. 

The majra al-binsir is called " masculine," and the majra al-wusta 
" feminine." The idea is Chaldaean and Pythagorean. 

'Iqd al-farld, ii, 258. Aghanl, xix, 153, xx, 169. 

Land, Remarks, 156. 
6 Aghanl, i, 152. 



72 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

tonics (mabadi), such as mutlaq (= open string), sabbdba 
( = first finger), wustd (== second finger), bin$ir (= third 
finger). The " species " or " modes " (asabi') bore such 
names as mutlaq fl majrd al-binsir (=" open string in 
the ' course ' of the third finger ") or Sabbdba fi majrd 
al-wustd (=" first finger in the 'course' of the second 
finger "). There were eight of these " modes." 

Although the Kitab al-aghdni contains innumerable 
verses that had been set to music during the Umayyad 
period, not a solitary note has come down to us. All 
that we know is the metre (arud] of the verse, together 
with the melodic mode (asba*), and the rhythmic mode 
(*?#')' which the great musicians sang in. Whether the 
virtuosi knew of a notation or tablature at this period, 
we cannot say, although something of the sort was prac- 
tised under the ' Abbasids. Possibly, the idea of a nota- 
tion was contrary to the interests of the musicians, who 
looked upon their compositions, so far as theory and 
practice is concerned, as something secret. 1 There were 
schools and cliques that passed on the tricks and special 
accomplishments from master to pupil. 2 All the evidence 
at this period seems to show that music was learned " by 
rote " and auricularly. 

All music was melodic or homophonic (in the Greek 
sense of the term). Whether a musician had his song 
accompanied by one or fifty instruments, nothing save 
the melody was performed, for as the author of the 
Kitab al-aghdni says, everyone " played as one. 1 ' 3 One 
departure, however, was allowed from this, and that was 
the admission of the za'ida or " gloss." This was a 
science of decorating or festooning the melodic outline 
by graceful figurations such as we know of in Western 
music as the appoggiatura, shake, trill and other graces, 
and including perhaps, another note struck simultane- 
ously, as with the Greeks. 4 Harmony, in our sense of 

1 Cf. C. S. Myers, Anthropological Essays Presented to E. B. Tylor t 
p. 240. Some musicians believed, like their Pagan forebears, that some 
of the music that they composed was actually given them by the jinn 
(genii). 

'Iqd al-farld, in, 187. 

8 Aghanl, vii, 135. 

4 Reinach, La musique grecque (1926), 69-70. 



THE UMAYYADS 73 

the word, was unknown. 1 Its place was taken by rhythm 
(tqd*), which one writer on Arabian music has termed 
"rhythmic harmony." 2 

Ibn Suraij tells us what was expected of a good musician 
in these days : 

" The best musician is he who enriches the melodies 
[by means of the ' gloss ' ?] and who quickens souls 3 ; 
who gives proportion to the measures (awzdn) and 
emphasizes the pronunciation ; who knows what is 
correct and establishes the grammatical inflection 
(i'rdb) ; who gives full duration to the long notes 
(nagham al-tiwdl) and makes definite the cutting off 
of the short notes (nagham al-qisdr) ; who ' hits the 
mark ' in the various genres of rhythm (iqd f ) and grasps 
the places of the intervals (nabardt), and completes 
what resembles them in the beats (nuqardt) of the 
accompaniment (darb)."* 

On the instrumental side, we see a few changes. It has 
already been noted that there was a change in the 
accordatura of the lute. This may have been due especi- 
ally to Ibn Suraij, and not necessarily Ibn Misjah. In 
684, 'Abdallah ibn al-Zubair brought Persian workers 
to help in the construction of the Ka'ba. From these 
slaves Ibn Suraij borrowed the Persian lute (udfdrisi)*; 
and he is said to have been " the first in Mecca to play 
Arabian music on it." 6 This lute continued to be in 
favour until the first half-century of the 'Abbasids, 
when a lute called the { ud al-shabbut was invented by 
Zalzal. Sometimes, the Persian name for the lute, 
which was barbat, is mentioned by the chroniclers, but 
the term was scarcely in common use as we know from a 
story of Yazld II (720-24), who was hardly uninformed 

1 By " harmony " I mean the modern art of chords. " Harmony/ 1 
in the Greek sense of appovta, i.e., an ordered succession of intervals, 
the Arabs certainly recognized. 

See my Music and Musical Instruments of the Arab, p. 45. It 
reminds one of the " armonia rithmica " mentioned in Trevisa's 
translation of Bartholomaeus de propnetatibus rerum. 

Or " prolongs the breath." 
Aghanl, i, 125. 

Persian " lutes " are mentioned as though there were several kinds. 

Aghanl, i, 98. 



74 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

in musical matters. The barbat had been mentioned to 
him one day, and he pleaded that he was unacquainted 
with such an instrument. 1 In Al-'Iraq, where the 
tunbur (pandore) was favoured, the 'ud (lute) appears 
to have been strung and perhaps tuned the same as the 
former. 2 At least we read of a two-stringed lute in the 
'Iqd al-fand in the time of Bishr ibn Marwan (d. 694), 
and its strings were termed the zw and bamm. 3 The 
tunbur was now in more general use in Al-Hijaz and 
Syria. 4 Those who still had a taste for the old Pagan 
songs of the " Days of Idolatry/' indulged in the tones of 
the tunbur al-mizdm, with its curious scale. The jan k 
or anj (harp) also had its votaries. 5 

Wood-wind instruments came into more accepted use 
by the virtuosi, as we frequently read of the mizmdr 
sustaining the melody of the song whilst the 'ud was used 
for the accompaniment. 6 Both the tabl (drum) and duff 
(square tambourine) were also used for the accompaniment 
by marking the rhythm. 7 Martial music consisted of 
drums and kettledrums. 8 With untutored musicians, 
we find the qadib or wand being used to accentuate the 
metrical or rhythmical beats. 9 

One of the great musical events of the Umayyad 
period was the pilgrimage of the famous songstress, Jamila, 
to Mecca, and the consequent fetes. All the principal 
musicians, male and female, of Al-Medma, took part 
in this affair, as well as the poets Al-Ahwas, Ibn Abi 
'Atiq, Abu Mihjan Nusaib, and a crowd of dilettanti, 
together with some fifty singing-girls (qaindt). The 
magnificence of the litters and the cortege in general 
was much commented on. When it arrived at Mecca, 
the leading musician and the poets 'Umar ibn Abi 
Rabfa, Al-'Arji, Harith ibn Khalid al-Makhzumi, received 
it in admirable style. On the return to Al-Medina, a 

l 'Iqd al-farld, iii, 201. 

Cf. Land, Remarks, 157, 161, and my Facts, etc., Appendix 24. 
' 'Iqd al-farld, iii, 181. 

4 Bar Hebraeus, 207. Al-Jabarl, ii, 146. 

Al-Farazdaq, 684. 

Aghani.ii, 121. 7 Aghanl, ix, 162. 

Syed Ameer Ali, Short History, 65. 

Aghdnf, i, 97. 



THE UMAYYADS 75 

series of musical fetes were held for three days, the like of 
which had not been experienced in Al-Hijaz before. 
During the first two days, performances were given 
either singly or by two or three together, by Jamila, 
Ibn Misjah, Ibn Muhriz, Ibn Suraij, Al-Gharid, Ma'bad, 
Malik, Ibn 'A'isha, Nafi' ibn Tunbura, Nafi' al-Khair, 
Al-Dalal Nafidh, Fand, Nauma al-Duha, Bard al-Fu'ad, 
Budaih al-Malih, Hibat Allah, Rahmat Allah and 
Al-Hudhali. On the third day, Jamila assembled fifty 
of the singing-girls, with their lutes, behind a curtain, 
whilst she herself, lute in hand, sang to their accompani- 
ment. This same orchestra played for the performances 
of other famous songstresses, such as Sallama al-Zarqa', 
'Azza al-Maila' (?), Sallama al-Qass, Habbaba, Khulaida, 
Rabiha, Al-Fariha (or Al-Far'a), Bulbula, Ladhdhat 
al-'Aish and Sa'ida (or Sa'da). 

Although the accounts of this pilgrimage and the fetes 
are based on the chronicle of a contemporary musician, 
Yunus al-Katib, a considerable amount of legend has 
crept in. 1 The pilgrimage probably took place during the 
reign of Al-Walid I (705-15). 2 

It was during the Umayyad regime that the first musical 
litterateur of the Arabs, Yunus al-Katib, began to collect 
biographical and historical materials concerning the 
native music, although Ibn al-Kalbi (d. 819) had already 
accomplished much in this direction. His Kitdb al- 
nagham (Book of Melodies) and Kitdb al-qiydn (Book of 
Singing-Girls) laid the foundation for the later musical 
literature, including the famous Kitdb al-aghani of 
M'l-Faraj al-Isfahanl (d. 967). 

The old Pagan notions of the elemental powers of music 
still obtained. Islam had banished idolatry, but super- 
stition held its own, and the genii (jinn), charms, phy- 
lacteries, and even magic, had their place. What else 
could be expected, seeing that Ja'far al-Sadiq (d. 765) 

1 See Encyclopedia of Islam, i, 1012. J.A ., Nov.-Dec., 1873, p. 451. 

'The dates of 'Azza al-Maila', Sallama al-Qass, Habbaba, and the 
various poets are some guide to this. At any rate, it could scarcely 
have occurred during the reigns of Sulaiman (715-17) or 'Umar II 
(717-20). Both fuwais (d. 710) and Ibrahim al-Mausil! (b. 742) are 
mentioned in the pilgrimage, but it is extremely doubtful if the first- 
named was present, and the latter certainly was not. 



76 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

the sixth imam, taught the theory of magical numbers, 
which was closely connected with music. On the whole, 
perhaps, magic and charms were discountenanced, except 
where they had a religious import. Poetry and song, 
however, were known as " lawful magic," a phrase which 
reveals the Pagan past. The wonderful effect of music 
could not help but clothe it with a magical or mystical 
significance. There is a chapter in the 'Iqd al-farid 
concerning those who fainted or died through listening 
to music. 1 Music, as a means of exciting religious 
devotion was even recognized in these days, although 
it was reserved for the later sufi to develop it. When 
the Arabs came in contact with the writings of the ancient 
Greeks during the 'Abbasid period, the doctrine of the 
" influence " (fa'thw^iQos) of music confirmed the older 
dogmas. 2 

Summing up the musical situation during the Umayyad 
days, one might emphasize three distinct features : 

(1) The revival of the Pagan Arab predilection for music 
due to the indifference of the Umayyads to Islam ; 

(2) the impress of Syria, which came with the removal of 
the capital to Damascus, when a North-Greco Semitic 
culture helped to mould a new musical theory ; (3) the 
influence of Persia, which made itself felt on the instru- 
mental side. Yet, as I have already pointed out, these 
external promptings must not be overstated. Ibn 
Khaldun says for instance that musicians from Persia 
and Byzantium, passing into Al-Hijaz, playing on the 
'ud (lute), tunbur (pandore), mi'zaf (? barbiton), and 
mizmdr (reed-pipe), led to the Arabs adopting Persian 
and Byzantine melodies for their poetry. 3 That is only 
a partial truth. That the Arabs adapted Persian and 
Byzantine melodies is generally admitted, 4 but they 
possessed the 'ud, tunbur, mi'zaf and mizmdr in the 
" Days of Idolatry." Further, there is not one Byzantine 
musician mentioned by the annalists during the first 

1 'Iqd al-farld, iii, 199. 

For a discussion of this question see my lecture, The Influence 
of Music : From Arabic Sources (1926). 
Ibn Khaldun, ii, 360. 
See ante pp. 46, 48, 70. 



THE UMAYYADS 77 

century of the Hijra, and all the musicians, save perhaps 
Nashit al-Farisi, even the so-called Persian musicians 
(i.e., of Persian extraction), were either born or educated 
in Arabia. Indeed, only four musicians of importance 
came from beyond the confines of Al-Hijaz, and they were 
Nashit al-Farisi (the Persian), Abu Kamil al-Ghuzayyil 
of Damascus, Ibn Tunbura of Al-Yaman, and Hunain 
al-Hiri from Al-'Iraq. 

The conservatory of music was Al-Hijaz, a circumstance 
which scandalized the provinces. Al-'Iraq, once the very 
seminal ground of Semitic musical culture, lagged behind, 
having fallen into the hands of the purists of Islam, who 
proscribed music, although one of its greatest theologians, 
Al-Hasan al-Basri (d. 728), said, " Music (ghina) is a good 
help in obedience to Allah, and man learns through it the 
ties of friendship." 1 

HI 

The lives of the virtuosi of the Umayyad period are 
replete with most interesting details of the social as well 
as the artistic life. Much of the material has been handed 
down on the authority of a contemporary musician, 
Yunus al-Katib, and for that reason it may be considered 
reliable so far as music is concerned. 

Ibn Misjah, 2 or in full, Abu 'Uthman Sa'id ibn Misjah 
(d. ca. 715), was the first and greatest musician of the 
Umayyad era. He was born at Mecca, and was a freeman 
of the Banu Jumh. During the reign of Mu'awiya I 
(661-80) his master heard him singing Arabic verses 
to Persian melodies, and it led to his emancipation. 
Ibn Misjah then took it into his head to go abroad so as 
to ascertain what else there was to be learned from 
foreigners. This took him to Syria and Persia, as we have 
already mentioned, and on his return to Al-Hijaz we see 
that new methods were superimposed on Arabian music. 
His fame spread with amazing rapidity and during the 
reign of 'Abd al-Malik (684-705) his popularity roused the 



al-farld, iii, 179. 

" This is the vocalization in the Fihrist, p. 141, and it is followed by 
Guidi. Kosegarten however (Lib. Cant., 9) has Musajjij, whilst 
Caussin de Perceval writes Musajjifc. (J.A. t Nov.-Dec., 1873, p. 414.) 



78 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

indignation of the stricter Muslims, who laid a charge 
against him before the governor of Mecca, saying that he 
was seducing the " Faithful " by means of his profane 
art. 1 The khalif, apprised of this, commanded that 
Ibn Mis j ah be sent to Damascus. On his arrival at the 
capital he fell in with the cousins of the khalif, who, 
being fond of music, took him to their palace, which 
adjoined that of the " Commander of the Faithful." 
Owing to the proximity, the khalif heard Ibn Mis j ah 
singing, and immediately commanded that he be sum- 
moned to his presence. Before the khalif we read of 
the musician singing the hudd', the ghina' al-rukbdn 
(a form of the nasb), and the ghind' al-mutqan (the artistic 
song). He was not only pardoned by the khalif, but 
awarded a handsome present. Ibn Mis j ah returned to 
Mecca, where he lived until the reign of Al-Walid I 
(705-15). We do not know the date of his death, but it 
appears to have taken place during the latter reign. 2 
Ibn Mis j ah has been designated " the first in the art of 
music/' and by general consent is included among the 
" four great singers." Among his pupils were: Ibri 
Muhriz, Ibn Suraij and Yunus al-Katib, all of whom are 
famed in Arabian musical annals. 3 

Ibn Muhriz, 4 or Abul-Khattab Muslim (or Salm) 
ibn Muhriz (d. ca. 715), belonged to Mecca, where his 
father, a Persian freeman, was one of the guardians of 
the Ka'ba. Ibn Muhriz himself is said to have been a 
freeman of the Banu Makhzum, and besides having been 
taught music by Ibn Misjah, he had learned the art 
of accompaniment from 'Azza al-Maila'. Unfortunately, 
he was afflicted with leprosy, and for that reason he made 
no appearance at court or public engagements, but led 
a wandering life, spending only three months of the year 

1 In the Raufat al-Safa, ii (i) 57, we read that it was the Devil's 
jealousy of the Prophet David's beautiful voice that led him to invent 
musical instruments, " and thereby decoyed men from the straight 
path, precipitating them into the valley of perdition." 

/. A. t Nov.-Dec., 1873, p. 421. 

Aghanl, iii, 84-88. 

4 In both editions of the Kitab al-aghdnl and elsewhere, he is called 
Ibn Muhriz. On the other hand, Al-Bu^turl (Dlwan, i, 134) calls him 
Ibn Muharrar, 



THE UMAYYADS 79 

at Mecca, the remaining time being taken up at Al-Medina 
and other towns. He is counted with his master, Ibn 
Misjah, as one of the contributors to the improvement 
of the native art. 1 He certainly had a considerable 
reputation, and was said to be " the best of men in music 
(ghind')," whilst popular voice dubbed him " The harpist 
or cymbalist (sanndj) of the Arabs/' 2 His songs were in 
great demand, and although he kept aloof from the 
public on account of his infirmity, these songs were in- 
troduced by a singing-girl. Two musical innovations 
stand to his credit the rhythmic mode called ramal, 
and the practice of singing the couplet (zauj). The 
beauty of his melody was its simplicity, and the annalists 
say, " It seems as though his singing was created from the 
very heart of man, since every man could sing it." 3 
Among the " four great singers " we find the name of 
Ibn Muhriz. 4 

Ibn Suraij, or Abu Yahya 'Ubaidallah 5 ibn Suraij 
(ca. 634-726) 6 was the son of a Turkish slave born at 
Mecca. He was a freeman of the Banu Naufal ibn 
'Abd al-Muttalib or the Banu'l-Harith ibn 'Abd al- 
Muttalib. He had been taught music by Ibn Misjah, 
and had received instruction from Tuwais at Al-Medina, 
where he also attended the concerts of 'Azza al-Maila/. 7 
Returning to Mecca, he took upon him the calling of a 
na'ih (singer of elegies), and we find him at the court of 
'Uthman. At this time he only sang the improvisation 
(murtajal) to the accompaniment of the qadib or wand. 
Up to his fortieth year he was practically little known, 
but in 683 he attracted notice by his elegy (nauh) on the 
slain of Al-Medina during that rebellious year. Im- 

1 See ante p. 70. 

That is, " the sanj player of the Arabs." Here, the instrument is 
undoubtedly meant, not like the title given to the Pagan poet Al-A'sha, 
who was called, " The sanndja (fern.) of the Arabs," meaning probably 
" The rhythmist (in poetry) of the Arabs." See Lane, Lexicon, s.v., 
but cf. Nicholson, Literary History of the Arabs, 123. De Perceval, 
Essai sur I' hist, des Arabes, ii, 396. Aghanl (SasI Ed.), i, 146. 

Aghdnl, i, 150-2. 
*See p. 80. 

Cf. Kosegarten, Lib. Cant., 12. J.A., Nov.-Dec., 1873, p. 457. 

He could scarcely have lived until the reign of Al-Hadl (785-6) as 
suggested in one place. (Aghdnl, vi, 67.) 

7 Aghdnl, ii, 174. iii, 84. xvi, 14. 'Iqd al-farld, iii, 187. 



8o A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

mediately he sprang into fame and Sukaina bint al- 
IJusain became his patroness. 

We have already seen that about 684 Ibn Suraij took 
up the *ud al-farisi or " Persian lute/' This circum- 
stance, together with the fact that a pupil of his named 
Al-GharicJ, had already outshone him as a nd'ih, led him 
to relinquish this profession and become a practical 
musician (mughanni). In this sphere he was equally 
successful, and he won the prize offered by Sulaiman 
(afterwards khalif) at a tournament of song at Mecca. 
He was later invited to the court of Al-Walid I (705-15), 
at Damascus, where he was lodged in a splendid pavilion 
and loaded with honours. On his return to Mecca 
however, he found that the new governor, Nafi' ibn 
'Alqama, had forbidden music and wine in the city; 
yet so great was the prestige of Ibn Suraij that the ordin- 
ance was relaxed in his favour. Hisham ibn Mirya said, 
" After the Prophet David, Allah created no musician 
comparable with Ibn Suraij." He was considered the 
supreme exponent of the ramal rhythmic mode, whilst 
his famous " Seven Songs " rivalled those of Ma'bad. 
Yunus al-Katib names him as one of the " four great 
singers." 1 

Al-Gharitf was the nickname (meaning " The good 
singer") 2 of Abu Yazid 3 (or Abu Marwan) 'Abd al-Malik. 
He belonged to a Barbary family of slaves, and was a 
freeman of the famous sisters known as the 'Abalat 
in Mecca. He afterwards passed into the household of 
Sukaina bint al-Husain, who had him trained as a 
nd'ih by Ibn Suraij. He then persevered with the song 
(ghind*) proper, and soon became a serious rival to his 
teacher. We next find him at the court of Al-Walid I 
(705-15) at Damascus, where he was accompanying his 
singing with the qadib, duff, and 'ud. When Naft' ibn 
'Alqama, the governor of Mecca, issued his decree against 

1 Aghanl, i, 97-129. Yunus al-Katib gives the " four great singers" 
as Ibn Suraij, Ibn Muhriz, Al-Gharld and Ma'bad. Ishaq al-Mausill 
says that they were 'ibn Suraij, Ibn Muhriz, Ma' bad and Malik. 
'Ubaid ibn Hunain al-HIrl mentions Ibn Suraij, Al-Gharld, Ma'bad 
and Hunain al-HIrl. 

Cf. Kosegarten, Lib. Cant., 14. /. A. t Nov.-Dec., 1873, 460. 

Kosegarten has Abu Zaid. 



THE UMAYYADS 81 

wine and music, Al-Gharid was compelled to seek refuge 
in Al-Yaman, where he is said to have died in the reign 
of Sulaiman (715-17). In another account, however, 
he is mentioned at the court of Yazid II (720-24)) l Accord- 
ing to the 'Iqd al-farid, Al-Gharid died at a festive gather- 
ing in the bosom of his family. He had just finished 
singing to them when " the jinn (genii) twisted his neck 
and he died." 2 He, too, has been claimed among the 
" four great singers." 3 

Ma'bad, 4 or Abu 'Abbad Ma'bad ibn Wahb (d. 743), 
was a mulatto, his father being a negro. He belonged 
to Al-Medma and was a freeman of 'Abd al-Rahman 
ibn Qatan. In his youth he was an accountant, but hav- 
ing taken music lessons from Sa'ib Khathir, Nashit 
al-Farisi and Jamila, he became a professional musician. 
After a sort of musical pilgrimage, he returned to his 
native city, and at a tournament of song organized by 
Ibn Safwan, a noble of the Quraish, he carried off first 
prize. He then sang at the courts of Al-Walid I (705-15), 
Yazid II (720-24) and Al-Walid II (743-44). Ma'bad 
was treated very handsomely by Yazid II, and one day 
this khalif said that he had noticed in Ma'bad's com- 
positions a certain strength (matdna) and solidity which 
did not exist in those of Ibn Suraij , whose works appeared 
to him to be more pliable (inhind') 5 and tender (layyin). 
To this Ma'bad replied, " Ibn Suraij cultivates a light 
(khafif) style, whilst I adopt a grandiose (kdmil tdmm) 
mode. He moves towards the East, and I towards the 
West/' 8 Upon the death of Ibn Suraij, Ma'bad came to 
be recognized as the leading singer, and when Al-Walid II 
was called to the throne in 743, he was invited to the 
court at Damascus. Here he was received with much 
consideration and was rewarded with a gift of 12,000 
pieces of gold 1 The next time that he was commanded 
to court, he was ill, and although he was lodged in the 

* Aghanl, vii, 11-12. 

1 'Iqd al-farld, iii, 187. 

* See ante, p. 80. 

4 Burton, Arabian Nights (Isobel Burton's Edit.), iii, 252, writes 
Ma'abid. 

Cf. J.A., Nov.-Dec., 1873, p. 488. Agh&nl, i, 116. 



82 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

palace itself, and treated with the utmost attention, 
paralysis intervened and Ma'bad died. At his funeral, 
the khalif and his brother, Al-Ghamr, dressed in simple 
tunics, accompanied the bier to the palace boundaries, 
whilst the renowned songstress, Sallama al-Qass, one 
of Ma'bad's pupils, chanted one of the old singer's 
elegies. 

Ishaq al-Mausill said, " Ma'bad was a consummate 
singer and his compositions reveal a talent superior to 
all his rivals." A poet of Al-Medina also wrote : 

"Tuwais, and after him Ibn Suraij, excelled [in 

music], 
But no musician outstripped Ma'bad." 

Poets like Al-Buhturi (d. 897) and Abu Tammam (d. 
846) have shown the place of Ma'bad in Arabian music. 1 
Among his famous songs were seven known as the " For- 
tresses " (husun Ma'bad) or " Cities " (mudun Ma'bad), 
whilst five others were celebrated as the Ma'baddt. 2 
Among his pupils were : Ibn 'A'isha, Malik, Sallama 
al-Qass, Habbaba, Yunus al-Katib and Siyyat. 3 

Ibn 'A'isha, or Abu Ja'far Muhammad ibn 'A'isha 
(d. ca. 743) belonged to Al-Medina, and was the son of 
'A'isha (his father's name being unknown), a female 
hairdresser in the service of Al-Kathir ibn al-Salt al-Kindi. 
In music, Ma'bad and Jamila were his teachers, and he 
possessed a voice of extraordinary quality. We read of 
his musical abilities as early as 'Abd al-Malik (685-705). 4 
At the courts of Yazid II (720-24) and Al-Walid II 
(743-44) he created a deep impression. Indeed, the 
former was so completely ravished by the music of Ibn 
'A'isha that on one occasion he gave vent to such ex- 
clamations in his ecstasy, that they were considered 
impious. 5 At Al-Walid's court, he was wine-bibbing with 

1 Al-Buhtur!, Dlwan (Const. Ed.), ii, 160, 193, 218. Abu Tammam, 
Dlwan (Bairut Ed.), 103. 

Aghani, viii, 91. Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., ii, 374. 

Aghdnl, i, 19-29. 'Iqd al-farld, iii, 187. See also my article on 
Ma'bad in the Encyclopedia of Islam. 

4 Aghanl, xviii, 127. 

Al-Mas'udI, vi, 9-10, 



THE UMAYYADS 83 

the khalif 's brother, Al-Ghamr, on a balcony, when they 
quarrelled. A struggle ensued, and the musician either 
fell or was thrown from the balcony and was killed. 
This is said to have been about 743. l Ibn al-Kalbi 
says of Ibn 'A'isha, " He was the best of mankind in 
singing," whilst his brilliant style gave rise to the saying, 
" Like the beginning of a song of Ibn 'A'isha." During 
his recitals he would preface the performance with an 
explanatory lecture on the poetry of the song, the music 
to which it was set, and the composer of it. 2 

Yunus al-Katib, or Yunus ibn Sulaiman (d. ca. 765), 
was a freeman of 'Amr ibn al-Zubair. He was the son of 
a lawyer of Persian origin, and had been educated at 
Al-Medina, where he became an official in the municipal 
service, hence his surname al-Katib ("the secretary"). 
At first, music was merely a pastime, but after studying 
under Ibn Muhriz, Ibn Suraij, Al-Gh arid and Muhammad 
ibn 'Abbad al-Katib, 3 he became a good all-round 
musician, even so proficient as to arouse the jealousy of 
Ibn 'A'isha. During the reign of Hisham (724-43) he 
was patronized by the khalif s nephew, who afterwards 
became Al-Walid II. 4 Unfortunately he got into trouble 
with the " authorities " by reason of having set to music 
some verses about a young lady of noble birth named 
Zainab, which had become popularly known as the 
Zayanib. The lady's family were incensed at the liberty 
taken in this way and Yunus al-Katib and the poet 
had to flee the country. On the accession of Al-Walid 
II (743), Yunus returned and was invited to the Damascus 
court where he remained until the death of this pleasure- 
loving monarch in 744. After this date we have no 
trace of Yunus, but he possibly lived until the middle of 
the reign of Al-Manur (754-75). 

The chief merit of Yunus al-Katib was on the literary 
side. He was a highly esteemed author and quite a 

*Cf. Aghdnl, v, 17, 54. viii, 86. 

Aghdnl, ii, 62-79. 'Iqd al-farid, iii, 187. In the index to De 
Meynard's edition of Al-Mas'udl's Prairies d'or, the singer Ibn' A'isha 
is confused with the traditionist and others of the same name. 

9 Aghdnl, vi, 15. 

* An account of this friendship is given in the 684th Night of the 
Arabian Nights, 



84 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

good poet. 1 His books on music, already adverted to, 
are mentioned in the Fihrist (ca. 988). They are a 
Kitab al-nagham (Book of Melodies) and a Kitab al-qiyan 
(Book of Singing-Girls). 2 The first-named, says the 
author of the Kitab al-aghdm, was " the first collection of 
song (ghind')," that is to say, it was the first attempt 
made to collect the songs of the Arabs, together with 
information about their melodies, modes, authors and 
composers. Among the pupils of Yunus were Siyyat 
and Ibrahim al-Mausili. 3 

Malik al-Ta'i, or Abu Walid Malik ibn Abi'1-Samh 
(d. ca. 754) was an Arab of noble birth, his father being 
a member of the Banu Thul, a branch of the Banu 
Tai', whilst his mother came of the Banu Makhzum and 
was therefore a Quraishite. He was born in the mountain 
home of Tai', but was left an orphan, when he was 
adopted by 'Abdallah ibn Ja'far of Al-Medlna. In his 
house, Malik received a good education, but in the year 
684, Malik heard the celebrated singer, Ma'bad at the 
house of Hamza ibn 'Abdallah ibn al-Zubair, and the 
event changed his whole career. He asked leave to take 
singing lessons from Ma'bad, and before long he aston- 
ished Al-Medina by his musical abilities. The court 
and nobility favoured him, and in company with Ma'bad 
and Ibn 'A'isha he appeared before Yazid II (720-24) 
and Al-Walid II (743-44).* On the death of his pro- 
tector, 'Abdallah ibn Ja'far (ca. 700), 5 he attached himself 
to Sulaiman ibn 'All the Hashimite. On the accession 
of the 'Abbasids to power (750), Sulaiman was appointed 
governor of the Lower Tigris, and Malik accompanied him 
to his seat at Al-Basra. After a short stay at this city, 
Malik returned to Al-Medina, where he died upwards of 
eighty years of age about the year 754. As a singer, 
Malik was ranked very high, and according to one version 
was one of the " four great singers." Apparently he 
was not an original composer, and he did not even play 

1 Brockelmann, Gesch. der Arab. Lit., i, 49. 
1 Fihrist, i, 143. 

Aghdnl, vi, 7. 

Cf. J.A., Nov.-Dec., 1873, 499. 

Cf . Encyclopedia of Islam, i, 23. 



THE UMAYYADS 85 

the 'ud (lute), which was a considerable drawback. 
At first he only sang the " improvisation " (murtajal), 
and we are told that Ma'bad had to rectify his songs for 
him. 1 

'Atarrad, Abu Harun (d. ca. 786) was a freeman of the 
Ansar and a pupil of Ma'bad. He was held in high 
esteem at Al-Medina by reason of his legal erudition as 
well as on account of his music. He was " pre-eminently 
a good singer and possessed a fine voice/' We read of 
him in connection with the best families in Al-Medina, 
including Sulaiman ibn 'All. When Al-Walid II (743-44) 
was khalif , he was called to court at Damascus, where his 
music so affected the khalif that he tore his robes in 
twain in his excitement. 'Atarrad was rewarded with a 
thousand pieces of gold, the khalif saying, " When you 
return to Al-Medina you may be inclined to say, ' I 
have sung before the Commander of the Faithful and 
so entranced him that he tore his garments/ but, by 
Allah, if a word escapes your lips of what you have seen, 
you will lose your head for it." 2 'Atarrad lived as late as 
the reign of Al-Mahdi (755-85), and perhaps even into the 
time of Harun (786-809). 3 

Among the famous songstresses of the Umayyad era 
there are four outstanding names : Jamila, Sallama 
al-Qass, Habbaba and Sallama al-Zarqa'. 

Jamila (d. ca. 720) was a freewoman of the Banu 
Sulaim, or rather the Banu Bahz, a branch of the former. 
Whilst she was with this latter family, Sa'ib Khathir 
was their neighbour, and Jamila was clever enough to 
memorize the notes (naghamdt) of his songs which she 
heard him singing, and one day she surprised her mistress 
by singing not only the songs of Sa'ib Khathir, but also a 
composition of her own. 4 Al-Medina soon rang with the 
praises of the new singer, and she was in great demand 
as a teacher, with the result that a crowd of slaves were to 

1 Aghdnl, iv, 168-75. ' Iqd al-farld, Hi, 187. See my life of Malik 
al-Ta'l in the Encyclopedia of Islam. 

* A similar story is told of Ma'bad. A khalif said to him : "If you 
desire to continue to receive the favour of kings, guard their secrets." 

Aghdnl, Hi, 96-9. 
'Aghanl, vii, 1 88. 

G 



86 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

be found at her house being prepared as " singing-girls " 
(qaindt). Having gained her freedom, she married, and 
established herself in a splendid residence, which eventu- 
ally became the centre of attraction for the musicians 
and dilettanti of Al-Medina and Mecca. Many musicians 
of later fame, such as Ibn Misjah, Ibn Muhriz, Ibn Suraij, 
Al-Gharid, Ma'bad, Ibn 'A'isha, and Malik, as well as the 
poets 'Umar ibn Abi Rabi'a, Al-Ahwas and Al-'Arji, 
were frequent auditors at her concerts, some indeed 
being her pupils. One of the most imposing events of 
her career was her famous pilgrimage. 

Although the dates of the Kitdb al-aghdni are rather 
confusing we can be fairly certain that Jamila flourished 
during the first half of the Umayyad period. In one place 
(Aghdm, vii, 148) she is mentioned as having sung before 
'Umar I (634-44), an d in another as singing the verses of 
Al-Ahwas before Yazid II (720-4). Clearly, the first 
date is too early, and apparently she did not live much 
later than Al-Walid I (d. 715). Jamila held a high 
place in the estimation of her contemporaries, especially 
as a teacher. Ma'bad said, " In the art of music (ghinff) 
Jamila is the tree and we are the branches." 1 

Sallama al-Qass was a singing-girl of a Quraishite 
noble of the Banu Zuhra named Suhail. She was a 
handsome mulatto who was brought up, if not born, at 
Al-Medina. She counted among her teachers, Jamila, 
Ma'bad, Ibn 'A'isha and Malik. At the death of Suhail 
she passed into the possession of his son, Mus'ab, who 
sold her to Yazid II, whilst he was a prince, for 3,000 
pieces of gold. Yazid was considerably influenced by 
Sallama, but when he became khalif, he transferred his 
affections to another singing-girl, Habbaba. Sallama 
al-Qass continued at court, however, under successive 
khalifs. 2 

Habbaba, the second favourite of Yazid II, was 
procured by him when he was a prince for 4,000 pieces 
of gold from a certain Ibn Rummana or Ibn Mina of 
the Banu Lashik. The affair greatly displeased his 

1 Aghanl, vii, 124-48. 

a Aghanl, hi, 115-117. Al-Mas'udI, v, 446, etc. 



THE UMAYYADS 87 

brother, the Khalif Sulaiman, and Yazid was compelled 
to send her back. When the latter became khalif (720), 
Habbaba became his constant companion until her death 
in 724. Yazid was prostrated with grief, and for a long 
time clung to the lifeless body. He never lifted his head 
again, and was dead within a week. Habbaba had been 
taught by 'Azza al-Maila', Jamila, Ibn Muhriz, Ibn 
Suraij, Ma'bad and Malik. 1 

Sallama al-Zarqa/ was a pupil of Jamila and took part 
in her celebrated fetes. She went to the court of Yazid I 
(680-83) an( i was presented to the poet Al-Ahwas, who 
had fallen in love with her. She was a celebrated beauty 
as well as an accomplished singer, and she passed into 
the hands of several masters. We read of her finally 
at the court of Yazid II (720-24). 2 Her sister Rayya' 
also won some fame. 3 

There are also some less famed musicians who deserve 
passing mention. 

Muhammad ibn 'Abbad al-Katib, a freeman of the 
Banu Makhzum, was one of the good singers of Al-Hijaz. 
He is specially mentioned on account of his interview 
with Malik ibn Anas (d. 795), one of the great legists of 
Islam. He was one of the teachers of Yunus al-Katib. 
He died at Baghdad in the reign of Al-Mahdl (775-85). 4 

'Amr ibn 'Uthman ibn Abil-Kannat, a contemporary 
of Ibn 'A'isha, was credited with a phenomenal voice. 
There is a story how a procession of pilgrims was held 
up by its charm. 5 

Ibn Tunbura was a musician who came from Al-Yaman, 
and is classed among the most skilful executants in the 
hazaj rhythmic mode. 6 He may be identified with Nafi 1 
ibn Tunbura, who flourished during the " Orthodox 
Khalifate." 7 

Al-Burdan was a pupil of Ma'bad, and was contemporary 
even with 'Azza al-Maila', Jamila and Ibn Muhriz. It 

1 Aghanl, xiii, 154-65. Al-Mas'udl, v, 447, etc. 

Aghanl, viii, 89-90. If the account in the Aghanl (xxi, 5) of her 
being at the court of Yazid II (cf. Guidi, 381, who says Yazid III) is 
correct, she must have been about fifty years of age. 

1 Aghanl , viii, 7, 9. * Aghanl. vi, 15-16. Aghanl, xviii, 126-8. 

'Iqd al-farld, iii, 187. 7 Aghanl, vii, 135, 163. 



88 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

was through him that the classical musical traditions 
of the Umayyad school were passed on to the virtuosi 
of the 'Abbasid court. In his old age he gave up the 
musical profession and became an inspector of markets 
in Al-Medma. 1 

Yahya Qail 2 was a freeman of the famous 'Abalat 
family. He gave music lessons to Khalif Al-Walid II 
(743-4), even during a pilgrimage to Mecca, which scan- 
dalized the devout. 3 

'Umar al-Wadi, whose real name was 'Umar ibn 
Da'ud ibn Zadhan, was a freeman of 'Amr ibn 'Uthman 
ibn 'Affan. He is said to have been a muhandis, i.e., 
a geometrician, and must therefore have been one of the 
first to be acquainted with this science among the Arabs. 4 
As a musician he was a great favourite with Al-Walid II 
(743-4), who called him, " The joy of my life." He was 
actually singing to this artistic khalif when the latter was 
assassinated. At his native place, Wadi al-Qura, he is 
said to have been the first of the singers (? of artistic 
music), and is claimed to have been the teacher of Hunain 
al-HIrl. His date, however, rather precludes these 
attributions, and perhaps it is his father who is meant. 5 

Abu'l-'Ala' Ash'ab ibn Jubair was another favourite 
of Al-Walid II, and he once sang before this khalif dressed 
in pantaloons made from the skin of an ass, much to his 
master's delight. He possessed not only an excellent 
voice, but a fund of buffoonery. 6 

Dahman (al-Ashqar ?) 7 'Abd al-Rahman ibn 'Amr 
was a well-known singer who had a contest with Hakam 
al-Wadi. He is mentioned as late as Facjl ibn Yahya 
the Barmakide in the eighth century. 8 

Abu 'Abd al-Rahman Sa'id ibn Mas'ud, commonly 
called al-Hudhali, was a sculptor by profession, but a 

1 Aghdnl , vii, 168-9. 

8 Guidi writes Qll, whilst Huart (Arab. Lit., 58) has Fll. Kosegarten 
(Lib. Cant., p. 18) calls him Qail. 
Aghdnl, Hi, 11-12. viii, 162. 

4 Unless muhandis here means " an architect, or engineer." 
' Aghdnl, vi, 141-44. 

Aghdnl, xviii, 83-105. 

7 Cf. Kosegarten, Lib. Cant., 21. Guidi, s.v. 

Aghdnl t iv, 141-46. 



THE UMAYYADS 89 

skilful singer as well. He found a considerable audience 
among the gentry of the Quraish, and he married a 
daughter of Ibn Suraij, who taught him her father's 
songs. 1 

Al-Baidhaq al-Ansari sang before Yazid II (720-24). 2 
Abu Kamil al-Ghuzayyil was at the court of Al-Walid II 
(743-4) and of this minstrel the khalif once said, "When 
he is away I am like one bereft." 3 Another singer was 
Ibn Mush'ab of Al-Ta'if in Al-Hijaz. 4 Bard al-Fu'ad, 
Hibat Allah and Rahmat Allah took part in the Jamila 
pilgrimage. 5 Other musicians of passing fame were : 
Abu Talib 'Ubaidallah (or Muhammad) ibn al-Qasim, 
better known as Al-Abjar, 6 and 'Abdallah ibn Muslim 
ibn Jundab. 7 

Among the less famed female musicians were : Tanbi, 
at the court of Sulaiman, 8 and Umm ' Auf , who belonged 
to the circle of Yazid II. 9 Shuhda (or Shahda) was a 
singing-girl of Al-Walid I (705-15), and her daughter 
'Atika became famous during the 'Abbasid regime. 10 
Khulaida, Bulbula, Ladhdhat al-'Aish and Al-Fariha 
were among those who assisted at the Jamila fetes. 11 

1 Aghanl, iv, 152. 
1 Aghanl , xin, 163. 

Aghanl, vi, 144-6. He is called Abu Kamil al-'Aziz in the various 
copies of the 'Iqd al-farld that I have consulted. 

4 Aghanl, iv, 82-3. 

Aghanl, vii, 135, 139. 

Aghanl, iii t 115-17. 
7 Aghanl, v, 145. 

Aghanl, ix, 20. 

9 Aghanl, xiii, 164. 

10 Aghanl, vi, 57-8. 

I, vii, 124, 135. 



CHAPTER V 

THE 'ABBASIDS 
(" The Golden Age," 750-847) 

" The art of music continued to make progress with the Arabs, and 
under the 'Abbasids it was carried to perfection." 

Ibn Khaldun, Al-Muqaddima. 

WHEN the House of 'Abbas rose on the ruins of the 
Umayyad dynasty, a new era dawned for the Arabs, 
and the foundations of the great intellectual life of sub- 
sequent centuries were laid. The more liberal intercourse 
with Byzantium, and the encouragement given to the 
people of Persia and Khurasan, were the main causes 
of this. Although Persia and contiguous lands had been 
thoroughly subdued, and almost every trace of their 
national life effaced under Arab domination and Islamic 
penetration, yet there still remained the mind of the 
Aryan, which became a weighty factor in the artistic, 
philosophic and scientific ideas of Islamic civilization. 
Under the Umayyads, the Arabs, as we have seen, formed 
a sort of military and administrative aristocracy. The 
time had now arrived, however, when the Arabs, sated 
with conquest, power and dominion, began to " settle 
down." They scorned even the best administrative 
positions, preferring to admit their erstwhile slaves 
(mawatt), Persians for the most part, to a number of them. 
Side by side with this political decline, there was a re- 
trogression in the purely Arabian arts and literature. 
Poetry especially was affected, and the number of 
Persian and other foreign poets who sprang up after the 
'Abbasids came into power is considerable. 

The arts became similarly influenced. Persian costume 
and decoration were encouraged at court, whilst Persian 
scholars and philosophers were welcomed. Indeed there 

90 



THE 'ABBASIDS 91 

are many proofs of a considerable domination of the 
Aryan over the Semitic spirit, for a time at least, in this 
direction. 1 In music, however, this influence did not 
reveal itself until a much later period. This was pro- 
bably owing to the fact that musicians formed quite a 
special and distinct class of society, which, by reason 
of its insularity, was very narrow and conservative. 
In this particular, it will be noticed that nearly all the 
musicians of the "Golden Age" were Arabs either by 
race or birth, and came mostly from Al-Hijaz, the home 
of the Arabian art. 2 

The 'Abbasid period that comes within our purview 
at present, falls into three cycles of culture epochs, which, 
for the sake of historical convenience, may be divided 
into "The Golden Age" (750-847), "The Decline" 
(847-945), and " The Fall " (945-1258). Herein, as in the 
previous chapters, the individual khalifs will be used to 
illustrate the determining political factors in the culture 
conditions. Everywhere they form excellent milestones, 
as it were, for this purpose, since all culture seems to 
depend on the body politic. 

i 

Abu'l-' Abbas, surnamed Al-Safiah (750-54), was the 
first 'Abbasid khalif. In choosing the capital, the new 
dynasty would have nothing to do with Syria, which had 
been the home of the Umayyads. It was perilously 
near the Byzantine frontier, and it was too far away from 
Persia and Khurasan, whose people had given the ' Abba- 
sids the throne. 3 Al-Kufa in Al-'Iraq was therefore made 
the capital, and the khalif built his first palace, the Hashi- 
miyya, at Al-Anbar, where there began those brilliant 
courts which soon became the by-word of the Mediaeval 
world. AbuV Abbas was a despot and a tyrant, but a 

1 Muir, Caliphate, 465. Huart, Arab. Lit., 64. Von Kremer, 
Streifztige, 32. 

Lichtenthal, Dizionario e bibliografia della musica, calls it, " The 
Golden Age of Persian music with the Arabs." As a matter of fact, 
Persian influence was extremely slight at this period in music. It was 
during " The Decline " that Persian music really came into favour. 

Le Strange, Baghdad during the 'A bbdsid Caliphate, 4. 



92 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

patron of the arts withal. His interest in Persia 
and Khurasan, where music and Islam did not come into 
conflict, had made him partial to the art, and in this 
respect he carried on the best traditions of the old Sasanid 
kings of Persia, of whose patronage of music the khalif 
was no feeble imitator. No clever musician ever left 
the presence of AbuVAbbas, says Al-Mas'udi, without 
a gift of money. 1 

Al-Mansur (754-75), his brother, is said to have been 
the greatest ruler among the 'Abbasids. During his reign 
the Persian family of Barmak were given high adminis- 
trative positions. Khalid al-Barmaki, his son Yahya 
al-Barmaki, and his grandsons Ja'far and Fa<Jl al- 
Barmaki, all played significant parts in the cultivation 
of the arts, and music especially, during the " Golden 
Age." In the year 762, Al-Mansur founded the city of 
Baghdad, which became not only the capital of the 
Empire and the centre of the Eastern world, but the very 
home of art, literature and science, and indeed of all 
intellectual activity, the glories of which became quite 
fabulous. The tales which were spread abroad concerning 
this wonderful city of Al-Mansur, with its two gorgeous 
palaces the Bab al-Dhahab and the Khuld, soon attracted 
intellectuals from all parts, as well as a crowd of poets 
and musicians who were soon to shed lustre on the 
Khalifate. Al-Mansur, we are told, was "completely 
insensible to the charms of music." 2 Hakam al-Wadi 
was the leading musician of the day, and although his 
talents were the talk of Baghdad, yet Al-Mansur could 
see nothing clever in his performance except, as he 
once said, that Hakam was certainly " clever " to be 
able to extort money from his patrons. 3 Yet Al-Mansur 
did not impose his personal dislike or indifference in this 
matter upon others, since we find the nobility of Baghdad, 
isuch as the khalifs cousins, the two sons of Sulaiman 
'ibn 'All, his own son Al-Mahdi, and his nephew Muham- 

Al-Mas'udi, vi, 121-2. 

Bar Hebraeus says that Al-Mansur pretended that he did not know 
what a tunbur (pandore) was. We have seen the story told of so many 
of the khalifs, that it looks suspicious. 

Aghdnl, vi, 6ft 



THE 'ABBASIDS 93 

mad ibn AbiV Abbas, all eager to patronize music and 
musicians. 

Al-Mahdi (775-85) was particularly fond of music, 
and his court in the new Qasr al-Mahdi palace was 
crowded with musicians, and among them : Hakam 
al-Wadi, Siyyat, Ibrahim al-Mausili and Yazid Haura/. 
At the same time, he would not allow his two sons 
Al-Hadi and Harun to meddle with music, and two emin- 
ent musicians were punished for entering the princes' 
palace contrary to his orders. 1 There is a good story told 
of Al-Mahdl and the court musician, named Siyyat, 
that is worthy of a place here. Siyyat had two instru- 
mental accompanists one named Hibbal, who played 
the mizmdr (reed-pipe), and the other named 'Uqqab, 
a performer on the 'ud (lute). The names of these 
individuals in Arabic, if pronounced in a slightly different 
way, stand for " whips," " ropes " and " punishment." 
One day Al-Mahdi, during a court reception (majlis), 
was heard to address some words to his chief eunuch, 
and all that the courtiers could hear were the above words 
of sinister import, which led them to conclude that one 
or more of their number had fallen into disfavour and were 
about to pay the penalty. Imagine their relief when 
Siyyat, and his two accompanists, Hibbal and 'Uqqab, 
appeared on the scene. 2 Muir says of the period of Al- 
Mahdi, " Music, literature, and philosophy, refined the 
age." 3 Al-Mahdi himself was fond of singing, and Ibn 
Khallikan says that " no man had a finer voice than he." 4 

Musa al-Hadl (785-6) only reigned a short time. The 
two musicians who had been punished by his father for 
entering his palace when he was a prince, were sent for 
on his accession, and they were installed as court 
musicians. They were Ibrahim al-Mausili and Ibn 
Jami'. These, with the older Hakam al-Wadi, were the 
special favourites. This khalif had a son, 'Abdallah, 
who was an accomplished singer and performer on the 
'ud (lute). 5 

1 Aghdnl, v, 4. Aghdni, vi, 7. 

Muir, Caliphate, 467. 

Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., iii, 464. Aghani, ix, 99. 



94 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

Harun al-Rashid (786-809) is the khalif whose name has 
become a household word not merely in the East, but in 
the West. The magnificence of his palaces at Baghdad, 
Al-Anbar and Al-Raqqa, has been abundantly com- 
mented on. His court " was the centre to which, from 
all parts, flocked the wise and the learned, and at which 
rhetoric, poetry, history and law, as well as science, 
medicine, music, and the arts, met with a genial and 
princely reception all of which bore ample fruit in the 
succeeding reigns." 1 The enchanting pages of The 
Thousand and One Nights have revealed Harun quite 
in harmony with this picture. The galaxy of musical 
talent which clustered at his court must have had millions 
disbursed in their favour, and among those who benefited 
were : Hakam al-Wadi, Ibrahim al-Mausili, Ibn Jami', 
Yahya al-Makki, Zalzal, Yazid Haura', Fulaih ibn Abi'l- 
r Aura/ 'Abdallah ibn Dahman, Al-Zubair ibn Dahman, 
Ishaq al-Mausili, Mukhariq, 'Alluyah, Muhammad ibn 
al-Harith, 'Ibthar (?), 'Amr al-Ghazzal, Abu Sadaqa, 
Barsauma, and Muhammad al-Raff. The favourite son 
3f Harun, who was named Abu Isa, was also a good musi- 
cian, and we find him at the court, with his brother 
Ahmad, taking part in the musical festivities. 2 

Al-Amm (809-13) and Al-Ma'mun, became joint 
rulers of the Empire, the one controlling the West from 
Baghdad, and the other the East from Merv. They both 
took the title of khalif, and this arrangement lasted until 
813, when war was declared between them. It resolved 
itself finally into a struggle between the Arab and Persian 
factions, culminating in the defeat of the former, and the 
death of Al-Amin. This khalif was a man of pleasure, 
who spent his whole time, we are told, with musicians 
and singing-girls. The latter were gathered for their 
beauty " from all parts of the Empire." His festivities 
" were of the most sumptuous kind/' and we read on one 
occasion that a hundred singing-girls sang before him. 3 
Whatever his faults were he was a patron of the arts. 
Isfraq al-Mausili, Mukhariq and ' Alluyah were among the 

1 Muir, Caliphate, 486. Aghanl, v, 63. ix, 143. 

Muir, Caliphate, 488-9. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 95 

famous musicians who received his bounty. 1 He gave 
protection to his uncle, Prince Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi, 
who was one of the most accomplished musicians of the 
day. The talents of his kinsman had a particular charm 
for him, 2 and in the khalif's last days, when the army of 
Al-Ma'mun was investing Baghdad, Al-Amin found 
solace in the songs of Ibrahim. Al-Mas'udi has drawn a 
pathetic picture of this khalif, just before the end, sitting 
by the banks of the Tigris, listening to the voice of his 
favourite singing-girl, Du'afa. 3 His son 'Abdallah was 
quite a talented musician. 4 

Al-Ma'mun (813-33) assumed full control of the Khali- 
fate on the overthrow of Al-Amin, although he remained 
at Merv until 819. During the interval, both Syria and 
Al-'Iraq rose in rebellion, and in Baghdad, Prince 
Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi was actually proclaimed khalif. 
This step greatly shocked the stricter Muslims because 
Ibrahim openly professed himself a musician. Di'bil 
the poet, suiting the occasion, wrote some bitter verses 
against Ibrahim, saying, " If Ibrahim is fit to reign, then 
the Empire has devolved by right to Mukhariq, Zalzal, 
and Ibn al-Mariqi [the court musicians]/' 6 He further 
asked what good could be expected from a khalif "who 
made the barbat (lute) his Qur'an."* Ibrahim's attempt 
to seize the Khalifate failed, and he threw himself on the 
mercy of Al-Ma'mun, who spared his life. But from the 
day of his triumphal entry into Baghdad in 819 until 823, 
Al-Ma'mun would not listen to a note of music, nor 
permit a musician to be near him, so exasperated was he 
with the perfidy of his musical kinsman, Ibrahim. 7 
The first to break the silence, we are told, was Muhammad 
ibn al-Harith, who was admitted to the khalif's presence. 8 
On the other hand, the 'Iqd al-farid says that the silence 

1 A concert is described in the Aghdnl t xvi, 138. 

Aghdnl, ix, 56, 62, 63. xxi, 242. 
Al-Mas'udI, vi, 426-30. 

4 Aghdnl, ix, 102-3. 

Ibn Khalhkan, Biog. Diet., i, 18. See also the lines by Bashshar ibn 
Burd preserved by Abu'l-'Ala al-Ma'arr!, Risdlat al-ghufrdn t 97. 

Aghdnl, xviii, 30. 

Aghdnl, ix, 52, 67. 
8 Aghdnl, ix, 52, 60, 61. 



96 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

only lasted twenty months, and that the first musician 
who was listened to was another musical kinsman, 
Abu 'Isa, the talented son of Harun. 1 At any rate, 
as soon as the proscription was raised, the famous Ma'mum 
palace rang with the sound of voices and instruments. 
Here appeared Ishaq al-Mausili, Mukhariq, 'Alluyah, 
Muhammad ibn al-Harith, 'Amr ibn Bana, Ahmad ibn 
Sadaqa and 'Aqid. 

Of great importance to musical culture and learning 
in general was Al-Ma'mun's patronage of the Greek 
sciences. Inclined to Rationalism, he made the 
Mu'tazati doctrine the state religion, which gave more 
freedom to independent thought. At Baghdad he in- 
stituted a college called the Bait al-hikma or " House of 
Wisdom/' where he installed Yahya ibn Abi Mansur, 
the Banu Musa and other learned men, who devoted 
their lives to the translation of the Greek sciences and 
their study, including the study of music, which had 
already started under earlier khalifs. 

Al-Mu'tasim (833-42) was equally favourable to the 
arts and sciences, and especially encouraged the trans- 
lators from the Greek and Syriac. He held out the hand 
of friendship to the famous Arab philosopher and music 
theorist, Al-Kindi, whose writings became the text-books 
for several centuries. Al-Mu'tasim built a new palace in 
the Mukharrim quarter of Baghdad, which became his 
residence until 836, when he removed to Samarra, where 
he built another costly palace. Here, as brilliant a 
scene was enacted as anything Harun of The Thousand, 
and One Nights had staged. The palace sheltered all the 
musical virtuosi of the day, and their doyen, Ishaq al- 
Mausili, was the khalifs " boon companion." The 
khalifs uncle, the musical Prince Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi, 
also found favour at his court. 2 Among other musicians 
of his munificence were : Ahmad ibn Yahya al-Makki, 
Zurzur al-Kabir, 3 and Muhammad ibn 'Amr al-Ruml. 4 

Al-Wathiq (842-47) was the first of the 'Abbasid 

1 'Iqd al-farld, iii, 188. Cf. Aghanl, v, 106. 

Aghanl, viii, 58. 

Aghdni, xii, 92. Aghanl, vi, 190. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 97 

khalifs who was actually a real musician. Hammad ibn 
Ishaq al-Mausili testifies that he was the most learned 
of the khalifs in this art, and that he was an excellent 
singer and a skilled performer on the 'ud (lute). 1 His 
songs are mentioned in the Agham. So much did the art 
find support and flattery at his court that one might 
think that it had been turned into a conservatory of music 
with Ishaq al-Mausili as Principal, instead of it being the 
majlis of the " Commander of the Faithful." Even the 
khalifs son Harun was a gifted musician and a brilliant 
instrumentalist. Among the older musicians at the 
court were : Ishaq al-Mausili, Mukhariq, 'Alluyah, 
Muhammad ibn al-Harith, 'Amr ibn Bana, whilst among 
the new-comers were 'Abdallah ibn al-' Abbas al-Rabfi, 
Ibn Fila/ al-Tunburi, Ibrahim ibn al-Hasan ibn Sahl 
and Al-Hasan al-Masdud. Al-Wathiq carried forward 
the spirit of Rationalism inaugurated by Al-Ma'mun, 
and gave the fullest encouragement to art and letters. 
His death in 847 brought to a close the first period of the 
'Abbasid regime, generally known as " The Golden Age " 
of Islam, by the side of which the civilization of con- 
temporary Europe might be considered mere barbarism. 

In Al-Andalus (Spain), at the Western extremity of the 
Empire, another Khalifate had sprung into being. 2 This 
land, as Stanley Lane-Poole has said, was to become " the 
marvel of the Middle Ages/' Al-Andalus, " when all 
Europe was plunged in barbaric ignorance and strife, 
alone held the torch of learning and civilization bright 
and shining before the Western world/' 3 

As early as 710 the Muslim armies, after conquering 
the northern coast of Africa, crossed the Mediterranean 
and invaded Spain. By 713, the whole of Spain prac- 
tically, up to the Pyrenees, and even further, had fallen 
to the invaders. Under the Umayyads, governors were 
appointed to this land, a system which continued under 
the early 'Abbasids. In the year 755, however, a refugee 
landed in Al-Andalus who was to change the fortunes 

1 Aghanl, viii, 172. 

* The rulers of Al-AndalusJhowever, did not call themselves khalifs 
until the time of 'Abd al-Rahman III (912). 
8 S. Lane-Poole, Moors in Spain, 43. 



98 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

of the country. This was 'Abd al-Rahman, the sole 
survivor of the House of Umayya who had managed 
to escape the swords of the ' Abbasids. Thousands flocked 
to his banner, and in the following year he made his 
triumphal entry into Cordova, the capital, and was pro- 
claimed sultan. Henceforth, this land has a history 
apart from the Khalifate of the East. 

'Abd al-Rahman I (756-88) laid the foundations for the 
future greatness of Al-Andalus. The Arab tribal factions, 
the Berbers, the muwalladun (Spaniards turned Muslims), 
whose internecine strife had for a quarter of a century 
been a menace to the body politic, were now checked. 
In spite of the fact that his reign was almost entirely 
taken up by politics, art and letters flourished. We read 
of his favourite singing-girl 'Afza, who sang to the 'ud. 1 

Hisham I (788-96) was, unlike his predecessor, extremely 
pious. This did not prevent him from surrounding 
himself with men of science, poets and sages. What his 
attitude was towards music we are not told by the 
annalists. From the fact that the court was dominated 
by the theologians of the Malik! school, it is possible that 
music may have been proscribed. 

Al-Hakam I (796-822) refused to be governed by the 
theologians, and they, in turn, fomented rebellion. The 
new sultan was a true son of the House of Umayya. 
" He was gay and sociable, and enjoyed life as it came to 
him, without the slightest leaning to asceticism. Such 
a character was wholly objectionable to the bigoted 
doctors of theology." 2 Al-Hakam was a free-handed 
patron of letters, art and science, and it was during his 
reign that music began to assume a high importance in 
Al-Andalus. Among the court musicians were : Al-'Abbas 
ibn al-Nasa/i, Al-Mansur (a Jew), 'Alun and Zarqun. 

'Abd al-Rahman II (822-52) did not inherit the strength 
of mind of his predecessor, and the theologians soon 
regained power. Yet they did not interfere with the artis- 
tic and intellectual tastes of the court, always the index 
of the general culture, which reached a very high 

1 Aghanl, xx, 149. Al Maqqarl, Analectes, ii, 97-8. 
1 S. Lane-Poole, Moors in Spain, 74. 



TPIE 'ABBASIDS 99 

pinnacle during his reign. 1 Music and musicians received 
greater attention than ever, a fact borne out by the life 
of Ziryab, the chief court musician. He was the " boon 
companion " of the sultan, who shared his meals with the 
musician. The great musical feature of the period 
was the school of Ziryab, and the importation of singers 
from Al-Medina for the propagation of the old Arabian 
musical ideals. The school lasted until the extinction 
of the Western Khalifate. On the death of 'Abd al- 
Rahman II in 852, Al-Andalus was split up into a number 
Df petty kingdoms, although a sultan still ruled at 
Cordova 

n 

The 'Abbasid Empire during the early years of the 
' Golden Age " extended westward through Egypt, 
Tripoli, Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco, into Spain and 
France, and eventually into Italy. 2 Northward, it 
ncluded Syria, a portion of Asia Minor, Kurdistan, 
\rmenia and Georgia. Eastward, it stretched through 
Iraq 'Ajami, Tabaristan, Khurasan, Khwarism, Bukhara 
:o the borders of Tartary, and through Persia, Afghanistan 
:o Sind. Baghdad was the capital of this vast Empire, 
md Al-'Iraq was the emporium of the East. Baghdad 
tfa^a.ciiy of .great populousness and magnificence. The 
wealth of the khalifs, nobility and merchants was almost 
abulous. 3 Al-Mahdi spent six million pieces of gold 
>n a single pilgrimage ! Harun, richer still, was able to 
jive away two and a half million at one time, whilst at 
lis death the treasury showed nine hundred million 
.terling. The magnificence of the palaces, mosques, 
colleges, and official residences, the luxurious appoint- 
nents and furnishings of the interiors, the gorgeous 
etinues and equipages, the sumptuous fetes, banquets, 

1 Casiri, Bibl. Arab.-Hisp. Escur., ii, 34. 

1 Some of these divisions were not, of course, known in these days, 
-nd so far as Spain and Italy is concerned the ' Abbasids only held a very 
light control on the former. 

8 However much we may feel inclined to doubt the veracity of the 
-nnahsts in these matters, it has to be confessed that the figures quoted, 
rom the highest to the lowest, are invariably proportionate. 



ioo A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

and other gatherings, together with the splendour of 
social life, not only in the capital, but in all the great 
cities from Cordova to Samarqand, surpasses anything 
of its kind in history. 

Yet one may ask, " What has all this to do with 
music ? " A great deal. Everywhere we see culture 
progress dependent upon economic and political forces, 
and side by side with this material luxury and political 
grandeur we find intellectual weal and aesthetic splendour. 
It has been called " The Augustine Age of Arabian 
literature/' for not only belles lettres, but science (including 
the science and theory of music) and philosophy were 
patronized with zeal. Colleges were opened, libraries 
founded, observatories, hospitals and laboratories built, 
and " all this brilliance of literary and scientific attain- 
ment is contemporary with Charlemagne, in other words 
when the whole of Christian Europe was submerged in a 
barbarism very insufficiently tempered by the educational 
reform which he initiated." 1 

The art of music naturally fared well under such pro- 
pitious conditions. The courts were crowded with pro- 
fessional musicians and singing-girls, who were treated 
with unheard-of favours and generosity, the memory 
of which is proverbial with the Arabs to-day. Much 
of this was due to Persian example, since the 'Abbasids 
desired to emulate the glories of the Sasanids of old. 2 
Ibrahim al-Mausili received 150,000 pieces of gold in one 
gift from Khalif Al-Hadi. Mukhariq took a present from 
Harun of 100,000 pieces. Hakam al-Wadi had nearly 
600,000 pieces of silver bestowed on him in two gifts 
from Harun and Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi. These people 
were certainly the virtuosi, but even the ordinary pro- 
fessional musician made a small fortune by his art in these 
days. 

It has already been shown that the favours showered 
on musicians were resented by the theologians (ulama), 
who objected to music on religious grounds. Now, 
however, even the poets are aroused to jealousy. It was 



1 Owen, J., Skeptics of the Italian Renaissance, 65. 
Al-Mas'udI, ii, 158. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 101 

the poet Abu Nuwas (d. ca. 810) who wrote the line, 
" The mien of a singer (mughanni) and the elegance of a 
freethinker (zindiq)" Even the singing-girls were the 
object of envy, since the poetess Fadl once said, " They 
never ask less than a gold-mine, and treat a poor man as 
if he were a dog. 1 ' 

Yet although we see these musicians enjoying wealth 
and patronage, and some of them like Ibrahim al-Mausill, 
his son Ishaq al-Mausill, Mukhariq, and others, were 
even the "boon companions " of the khalifs, 1 yet their 
avocation placed them in an anomalous position. The 
" letter " of the law proscribed them because they were 
the practitioners of an art which, even if it were not 
actually " sinful " (haram), was " religiously unpraise- 
worthy " (makruh), as Burton says. 2 However much the 
Arabs delighted in a musician's company, it was apparent- 
ly some spiritual consolation and satisfaction that they 
recognized him as a " sinner/' Indeed, musicians had 
no standing at law, at any rate in regard to their calling. 3 
Even their professional life was not so serene as might be 
imagined, for often their duties were most arduous and 
exacting. 4 Many, too, tasted both the whip and the dun- 
geon at the hands of the khalifs and nobility. 5 Still, 
on the whole, their lot was certainly better than that of 
Haydn and Mozart at European courts nine centuries later. 

1 The virtuosi, like the " boon companions," were expected to be 
able to do justice to the wine-cup, and not infrequently we find them 
under the influence of wine. Al-Amln however, although fond of the 
wine-cup himself, did not extend its bounty to his musicians. Aghdnl, 
vi, 72. 

Burton, Arabian Nights (Isobel Burton's edit.), vi, 59. 

A musician named Ja'far al-Tabbal brought an action against 
Prince Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi for payment of lessons given to a singing- 
girl. Before the judge, he offered to prove that he had fulfilled his 
contract, by getting the girl to sing. The judge would have none of it, 
and walked out of court crying : " The curse of Allah on all you 
musicians." Judgment therefore went by default against the musician. 
Aghdnl, xiv, 5. Musicians, like modern " bookmakers," were tolerated 
in their avocation, but dared not go to law on account of it. Even 
to-day, in Islamic lands, a singer cannot sue for wages. Al-Hidaya, 
iv, 212. 

Aghdnl, xvi, 138. If the musicians of the Umayyads were the 
journalists of the day, they were more so under the 'Abbasids. Know- 
ing that music went hand-in-hand with the wine-cup, and that " men 
in wine speak the truth," the 'Abbasids even used their musicians as 
spies. Aghdnl, v, 113. 

Aghdnl, iii, 162, v, 7 



102 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

Besides the virtuosi there were two other classes of 
musicians, the instrumentalist (dldtl) and the sing- 
ing-girl (qaina). These were either slaves or freemen 
who were attached to the virtuosi as accompanists, but 
their position as freemen was an inferior one. The 
second class were slaves who, when they were betrothed 
or became mothers, were given their freedom. 1 At the 
courts some ten or twelve of the virtuosi were always 
to be found, whilst thirty, fifty or even a hundred or more 
singing-girls were part of the establishment. 

As in the Umayyad days, the singing-girls were usually 
taught by the virtuosi, more frequently at their schools 
of music. In the " Golden Age," the famous Ibrahim 
al-Mausili, the leading musician of the time, had his 
music school for the training of singing-girls. High 
prices were asked for these female musicians, for they 
were invariably highly accomplished, not only in music, 
but in other departments of culture. 2 

It still continued to be the custom at court for the 
virtuosi to be hidden from the khalif by a curtain, although 
according to Lane it would appear that what really took 
place was that there was a dais or stage for the musicians, 
which was screened off. 3 The accounts of the author of 
the Kitdb al-aghdni do not admit of this interpretation 
generally. Ibn Jami' describes the music saloon of the 
court in the following story : 

" I was led into a large and splendid saloon, at the 
end of which there hung a gorgeous silk curtain. In 
the middle of the room were several seats facing the 

1 Aghdnl, xix, 136. 

In the A If laila wa laila, ii, 493, we read of a singing-girl versed in 
syntax, poetry, jurisprudence, exegesis, philosophy, musical science, 
arithmetic, geodesy, geometry, fables of the ancients, the Qur'dn, 
hadlth, medicine, logic, rhetoric, composition, and the art of playing the 
'ud (lute). See also i, 280 ; iv, 163. 'Iqd al-farid, ii, 198. Ibrahim 
al-Mausill selling a singing-girl to Ja'far al-Barmakf, asked rather a 
high price. The latter said : " What is her particular merit that she is 
priced so high ? " The musician replied : " Though she had no other 
merit than of singing this melody which is mine, she is worth the price 
and more." It is highly probable that the singing-girl of Egypt to-day 
hands down in her name, 'dlima (" learned "), the old status of her 
class. Cf. Lane, Modern Egyptians, 355, who says that the word might 
perhaps be derived from the Hebrew word 'almdh ("a girl"). 

* See Lane's " Notes " to the Arabian Nights, i, 203. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 103 

curtain, and four of these seats had been already taken 
by four musicians, three females and one male, with 
lutes (iddn) in their hands. I was placed next to the 
man, and the command was given for the concert to 
commence. After these four had sung, I turned to 
my companion and asked him to accompany me with 
his instrument, saying, ' Sharpen (shadd) the string 
of your lute thus, to raise the pitch (tabaqa), and go 
down to this fret (dastdri) thus when playing/ I then 
sang a melody of my own composition, and when 
finished, five or six eunuchs came from behind the cur- 
tain and demanded the name of the melody. I replied, 
' It is my own/ After they had returned with the 
message, Sallam al-Abrash [the chief eunuch] came 
from behind the curtain and said, ' You lie ! It is by 
Ibn JamiV . . . Again we all sang in the same order, 
and again I sang one of my own compositions, and 
again I was asked the composer, and once more I said, 
' It is my own/ and once more did the chief eunuch 
say, ' You lie ! It is by Ibn JamiV Then I said, 
' Yes, and I am he/ As soon as I had uttered these 
words, the curtain opened, and Fadl ibn Rabf cried, 
' The Commander of the Faithful/ and Harun appeared 
upon the arm of Ja'far al-Barmaki, and, approaching 
me said, * Ah, it is you, Ibn JamiV . . . Harun then 
reclined upon a divan and commanded me to sing some 
new melody. I then sang my song of the negress/' 1 

In this account we see the khalif behind the curtain 
listening to music, and then practically tete d tete with the 
performer. A similar sort of thing occurs over and over 
again in the pages of the Kitab al-aghdm. In the 'Iqd 
al-fand we read that when Ishaq al-Mausili and Khalif 
Al-Mahdi became reconciled, the musician used to say, 
" I reclined with the khalif [on a divan] and he patted me 
with his hand as a familiar friend would do/' 2 Of 
course, the singing-girls continued to be screened off. 3 

*Aghanl t vi, 78-80. Abridged. 

'Iqd al-farld, iii, 188. 

Abu'l-'Ala al-Ma'arri gives as an argument against girls going to 
school that they sit without a curtain, when " even the singing-girls 
sit behind one." Luzumiyyat, p. 62. 



104 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

During the period covered by the " Golden Age," 
Arabian music made greater progress than during any 
other period. This was due primarily to two causes, 
which can be viewed quite apart from industrial pros- 
perity or political poise. These causes were the influence 
of Shi' a 1 and Mutazili* ideas upon Islamic thought, 
and the dominant note of Greek scientific culture in 
secular life. The former brought a more tolerant attitude 
towards music in so far as Islam was concerned. Strange 
to say, however, the theologians had considerable power 
at court. Whilst the Umayyads kept the theologian 
to his private and domestic sphere, the 'Abbasids brought 
him into the court and made him take part in public 
policy. Favouring the theologian in this way was 
evidently considered a better policy than keeping him at 
a distance. The personal contact seems to have enabled 
the khalifs to get their own way to a considerable extent, 
and certainly it obtained so far as the maldhl were 
concerned, including music. Harun said to Ibrahim 
ibn Sa'd al-Zuhri the theologian one day, " I hear that 
Malik ibn Anas makes singing a crime." The court 
theologian replied, " Has Malik the right to loose and 
bind ? ... If I heard Malik condemning it, and I had 
the power, I would improve his education." 3 Harun 
was amused at the reply. Indeed, what other reply 
could Al-Zuhri have made, seeing that everyone knew, 
many to their cost, that it was Harun alone who could 
" loose and bind." Of course, the orthodox still 
murmured, and we have the poet Bashshar ibn Burd, 
himself a Rationalist, voicing their opinion in a satire, 
saying how incongruous it was to find a " Successor of 
the Prophet in the midst of wine-bottle and lute." 4 
The pasquinade brought him to his death. 

Proficiency in the theoretical side of musical art had 

1 The Shi'ites were the sect (sht'a) or followers of 'All. They were 
always more tolerant and open-minded on the question of music than 
the Sunnites or orthodox Muslims. The Persians are Shi'ites. 

The Mu'tazilites (" Seceders ") were the Rationalists of the day. 

' Iqd al-farld, hi, 180. 

* Aghanl, jii, 71. De Meynard translates the passage as " lutes and 
oboes," but the text has ziqq wa'l-ud. Cf. the line quoted by Abu'l- 
'Ala al-Ma'arrl, where it runs, " nay (flute) and the '&d (lute)." 



THE 'ABBASIDS 105 

long been established, but this did not prevent further 
progress. In general culture we see the influence of both 
Byzantium and Persia, the latter perhaps the most 
marked. Persian influence, especially that from Khur- 
asan, made itself felt on the accession of Al-Ma'mun 
(813), for the reason that the latter event pushed back 
the Arabian ascendancy which Al-Amin represented. 1 
Its effect on music, however, was considerably less than 
in other spheres, and perhaps quite unimportant. Byzan- 
tium contributed very little to musical culture. What the 
Arabs got from Byzantium were the ancient treatises 
on Greek theory of music, which were practically unknown 
to the Byzantines save by name. Indeed, it was not until 
the Syrian and Arab translators turned these treasures 
into Arabic that the East revived its interest in them. 
From these sources the Arabs certainly borrowed, but the 
loaning did not assume much import until the Golden 
Age had passed. 2 

On the whole, theoretical progress during the period 
under survey was practically indigenous. Ishaq al- 
Mausili came forward as the chief musician of his day, 
to lay down and fix definitely the theory which appears 
to have fallen into neglect since the time of Yunus al- 
Katib in the days of the Umayyads. It was Ishaq, 
says the author of the Kitdb al-aghdnl, who first estab- 
lished methodically the genres (ajnds) of the melodic 
modes (asdbi' ) and the different kinds (tara'iq) of rhythmic 
modes (iqd'dt), which, in the works of Yunus al-Katib, 
had been insufficiently indicated. Al-KhaHl ibn Ahmad, 
one of the most famous scholars of the time, contributed 
the first really scientific treatises it would seem on 
musical theory in his Kitdb al-nagham (Book of Notes) 
and Kitdb al-iqd* (Book of Rhythm). 3 More important 
still were the treatises of the celebrated Al-Kindl, no less 
than seven of these standing to his credit. 4 From 
the latter we get a close insight into the theory and 
practice of the virtuosi of the age, together with the 

* Jurjl Zaidan, 185-6. 

Aghdni, v, 53. See my Facts, etc., pp. 55-6. 
Fihrist, 43. 

'Fihrist, 257. 



io6 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

theories derived from the Ancient Greeks. Collectors of 
songs such as Yahya al-Makki, Ahmad ibn Yahya al- 
Makki, Fulaih ibn Abi'l-'Aura/, and Ishaq al-Mausili, 
issued several works, whilst the last named compiled a 
dozen or so biographies of famous musicians. 1 It is 
here that we see how considerably the Arabian traditions 
were preserved in the music of the period. 2 

The rhythmic modes (iqd'dt) appear to have been little 
different from what we saw in Umayyad times. They 
are fully described in the Risdla fl ijzd' khabariyya 
al-musiqi by Al-Kindl, now preserved at Berlin. 3 The 
only apparent difference is the substitution of a khafif 
al-khaf if instead of a ramal tunburi. The Persians adopted 
the rhythmic modes ot the Arabs, although it was not 
until the time of Harun (786-809) that they took the 
ramal mode, which was introduced by a musician named 
Salmak. 4 

In the melodic modes (asdbi') the old principles still 
obtained. Ishaq al-Mausili had composed a song which 
attracted the attention of Prince Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi, 
who wrote to the composer asking him to let him have 
it. Ishaq replied by letter giving him particulars of the 
verse, together with " its rhythm (Tqd ( ) and its division 
(bastt), its course (majrd) and its melodic mode (asba'), 
its proportionate dividing (tajzi'a) and its parts 
(aqsdm), the succession of its notes and the places of the 
rests (maqdti'), the particulars of its compound modes 
(adwdr) and its measures (awzdn)."* 

The passage above gives us a fair example of the 
technical nomenclature of the period Iqd t , asba' , and 
majrd, we are already acquainted with. The busut 
(sing, basit or basdt) appear to have been the divisions of 
the rhythmic modes (iqd'dt). The word for the propor- 
tionate dividing of the melody or rhythm has its root in 
jaza'a, which opens an interesting speculation for the 
origin of the modern word jazz.* The maqdti' (rests) 

1 Fihrist, 141-3. Aghanl, i, 183. vi, 17, 18. xv, 159. 

Ishaq al-MauilI sang the old melodies. Aghanl, xviii, 175. 

Berlin MS., No. 5503, fol. 31, v. 

'Aghdnt, i, 151* Aghdnt , ix, 54, 56. 

See my Facts, etc., p. 14. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 107 

are detailed in the rhythmic modes given by Al-Kindi. 
The adwdr (sing, daur) 1 were made up of the first tetra- 
chord of one melodic mode (a$ba { ) and the second tetra- 
chord of another. Transposition scales called tabaqat 
(sing, tabaqa) were practised. These were, of necessity, 
innumerable, and Ishaq al-Mausili says that it took him 
ten years to learn them. These tabaqat were like changes 
of key signature. 

There is another very interesting passage which 
reveals the fact that the Arabs employed genres similar 
to the Ancient Greeks. The tetrachord was the theo- 
retical landmark of the Arabs, and it was contained with 
the stretch of the hand on the f ud (lute). 2 The Greeks 
called their variations of the tetrachord genres (=ywj), 
of which there were three, the diatonic, chromatic, and 
enharmonic. In the loth century these were known to 
the Arabs as the qawl, khunthawi, and rdsim respectively. 3 
That the Arabs of the period concerned with used these 
genres is quite likely, as the following passage appears 
to show 4 : 

" I read in one of the books that Muhammad ibn 
al-Hasan (and I think that he is Ibn Mus'ab) mentions 
Ishaq al-Mausili. He says, ' His art was correct in 
principles (usul), and his notes wonderful of arrange- 
ment (tartib), and his division (qism) just of measures 
(awzdri). And he used to perform in all the divisions 
(busut) of the rhythms tyqd'dt), and whichever division 
(basdt) he wished to sing a song in, he used the aqwd 
( = qawi) song which was the division (basdt) of the 
ablest of the older people (qudamd'). . . . Sometimes he 
would seek the very threshold of the ancients (awd'il) 
and would follow their manner in their methods. 
Then he would build upon the rdsim, and work it out 

1 Both editions of the Kitdb al-aghdnl have awdra. De Meynard 
(J.A., Mars-Av., 1869, p. 325) rightly suggests that this should be 
adwdr. Strange to say Kosegarten (Lib. Cant., 183), in quoting this 
passage, actually omits this word. 

This point is worth noting in connection with Wead's theories in 
his Contributions to the History of Musical Scales, 433. 

Mafdtlh al-ulum, 243-4. 

4 Aghdni, v, 53. 



io8 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

according to their example. He would then make 
it qawi, and so his work became strong and firm, uniting 
in it two states the strong in nature (and it is easy of 
method), and the khunthd (= khunthawi), in which are 
many notes (nagham) and their arrangement (tartiV) 
between the high (siyyah) and the low (isjdh). This 
art is more akin in the tabaqat (scales) to that of the 
ancients (awa'il) than to the less remote people. 1 " 

Discussions on the theory of music, even before the 
khalifs, both by the virtuosi and the scientific musicians, 
were not uncommon, and they certainly reveal the temper 
of the period. 2 That a phonetic notation was known 
during the Golden Age is highly probable. Perhaps 
the letter of Ishaq to Prince Ibrahim mentioned above 
contained a notation. We certainly read that khalif 
Al-Ma'mun (in 819) "waited twenty months without 
hearing a letter (harf) of music (ghind')."* Al-Kindi 
(d. ca. 874) uses a notation in his Risdla fi khubr ta'Kf 
al-alhdn, which is the earliest definite use of it among 
the Arabs. 4 

Considerable changes had taken place on the instru- 
mental side, and during the second half of the 8th century, 
one of the court musicians, Zalzal, introduced a new type 
of 'ud (lute), which was soon generally adopted in the 
place of the 'ud al-fdrisi or Persian lute that had been in 
common use. This " perfect lute " was called the 'ud 
al-shabbut, which Land thinks to have been the instru- 
ment in which the neck and fingerboard gradually 
broadened out to the body. 6 It was still mounted with 
four strings, 6 although in Al-Andalus, a musician named 
Ziryab had added a fifth. 7 This Ziryab, whilst he was 
at the court of Harun (786-809), introduced some novel 

1 By the " ancients " we may presume that the Greeks are meant, 
whilst the " older people " probably refers to his immediate predeces- 
sors. By " less remote people " we may infer that the Byzantines are 
intended. 

Aghanl, v, 22, 23, 53, 60-1. ix, 74. 

'Iqd al-farld, in, 188. Perhaps harf stands for " particle." 
British Museum MS., Or. 2361, fol. 167, v. 

Land, Remarks on the Earliest Development of Arabic Music, p. 161-2. 

Al-Kindi, Berlin MS., 5530, fol. 30. Aghanl, v, 53. 
f Al-Maqqarl, Moh. Dyn. t ii, 116. 




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MtTSICAl. NOTATION. 
From the " Kisala f! khubr ta'Hf al-alhan " of Al-Kindl (d. 74) 



THE 'ABBASIDS 109 

improvements to the lute. Whilst his instrument was 
" equal in size and made of the same wood " as the 
lute in general use, it was heavier by nearly one-third. 
His silk strings were made differently from those of his 
confreres, 1 whilst his second, third and fourth strings 
were made from the entrails of a young lion, which he 
claimed to be " far superior to those of any other animal 
in point of strength, depth of tone, and clearness of sound." 
Besides this he asserted that they would bear much longer 
wear and were not so liable to change of temperature. 2 

We read of large bands of singing-girls playing lutes 
in these days, for these were the special instruments 
of accompaniment. Only occasionally do we read of the 
mi'zafa (? psaltery) or the tunbur (pandore) being used. 
More general for the accompaniment, after the lute, 
were the wood-wind instruments (mazdmir) of the flute 
type, the tdbl (drum) and the duff (square tambourine). 
Open-air music consisted of the tabl (drum) and surndy 
(reed-pipe), 3 and the court military band of Al-Amin 
was thus constituted, 4 which shows that the old ideas of 
the Pagan Arabs concerning martial music still obtained. 

Some writers have imagined that these bands were 
directed by a conductor with baton in hand. 5 This 
conjecture appears to have been due to a misinterpre- 
tation of a passage in the 'Iqd al-fand, which runs, " Ibra- 
him [al-Mausili] was the first to beat the rhythm (tqd') 
with a qadfb (wand)." 6 This "beating" has already 
been described, and was much older than Ibrahim 
al-Mausili. 7 

The doctrine of the ethos (ta'thir) was now definitely 
linked up with music. This old Semitic idea had been 
strengthened by the doctrines of the Sabi'a of Harran 
and the theories of the ancient Greeks and Byzantines. 

1 Cf . the text. 

Al-Maqqarl, Analectes, ii, 88. Moh. Dyn., ii, 116-21, 410. 

The text has surndb. 

Aghanl t xvi, 139. 

Syed Ameer All, Short Hist., 451. Perron .Femmes Arabes. F. 
Salvador-Daniel, 98. Fetis, Hist. Gen., ii, 121. The latter attributes 
the 'Iqd account to Ishaq al-Mausill. 

'Iqd al-farld, hi, 18*8. 

T Cf. Aghanl, i, 97, and see ante pp. 16, 47, 74. 



no A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

Almost everything terrestrial was " influenced " by 
something celestial. The seven notes of the scale corres- 
ponded to the planets. The twelve signs of the zodiac 
were associated with the four pegs, four frets, and four 
strings of the 'ud. The four strings were affiliated with 
the primeval elements, the winds, the seasons, the 
humours, the mental faculties, colours, perfumes, the 
quarters of the zodiac, moon, and the world. Al-Kindi 
deals with this question at considerable length. 1 In 
Al-Andalus also, the doctrine was in full swing. 2 

The Music School of Ibrahim al-Mausili at Baghdad 
has been mentioned. Unfortunately we get little or no 
information about the didactic methods which obtained 
there. In Al-Andalus, however, we get some details 
of the Music School founded by Ziryab. Before the ad- 
vent of Ziryab, the professors of music had no other 
method of teaching their pupils to sing than mere prac- 
tical example. 3 Ziryab changed all this. He divided 
the curriculum of his pupils into three parts first, the 
rhythm, metre, and words of a song were taught to the 
accompaniment of a musical instrument. Then, the 
melody in its simple state was mastered. Finally, 
the " gloss " (za'ida) was introduced. 

The following account is given of the method adopted 
by Ziryab with beginners. " Whenever a youth came to 
him for the purpose of taking lessons in vocal music, 
he made him sit down on the round cushion called 
miswara, and bade him exert the full power of his voice. 
If his voice was weak, he was made to tie his turban 
round his waist, a practice which is well known to 
increase the voice. ... If the youth stammered, or could 
not well open his mouth, or if he had the habit of clenching 
his teeth whenever he spoke, he bade him put inside his 
mouth a small piece of wood three inches (three fingers) 
in width, which he was to keep there day and night 
until his jaws were well expanded. This being done, he 
made him cry out at the top of his voice, ya hajjdm or 

1 Al-Kindl, Berlin MS., 5530, fol. 30. 

Al-Maqcjarl, Moh. Dyn. t ii, 118. See my Influence of Music: 
From Arabic Sources. 

See Ribera, La ensenanza de los musulmanes espanoles. 



THE 'ABBASIDS in 

ah ! telling him to protract the sound as much as possible : 
if he found that he uttered those words in a clear, powerful, 
and sonorous voice, 1 he admitted him into the number of 
his pupils, and spared no trouble or fatigue to make him 
an accomplished singer ; if the contrary, he took no 
further pains with him." 2 

Notwithstanding the inordinate elevation of musical 
art and belles lettres during the " Golden Age," the great 
classical standards fell into desuetude. The old qa&da 
which " breathed of the desert," was a thing of the past. 
The litterateurs were Persians for the most part, and, as 
citizens of gay and festive communities, they saw little 
interest in the stern ideals of Arab life which formed the 
background of Arabic poetry. Hence a new school arose 
in which we find " the maddest gaiety and the shame- 
fullest frivolity ; strains of lofty meditation mingled 
with a world-weary pessimism ; delicate sentiment, 
unforced pathos, and glowing rhetoric ; but seldom the 
manly self-reliance, the wild, invigorating freedom and 
inimitable freshness of badawi song." 3 

Music, dependent on the song, which was far more in 
favour than instrumental performance, became similarly 
affected. As far back as the days of Ma'bad and Ibn 
Suraij, there had been a growing preference for a lighter 
(khafif) rhythmic mode in place of the more serious one 
(kdmil tdmm)* The craze for the former grew and the 
hazaj and makhuri rhythmic modes were the most frequent 
in demand. Hakam al-Wadi, being upbraided by his son 
for pandering to the taste of the public in this way 
with the hazaj rhythm, answered him thus, " My son : 
For thirty years have I sung in the thaqll rhythmic modes 
and hardly gained a living, yet in the three years of singing 
in the hazaj I have earned more money than thou hast 
seen in thy life." It was the old story, the musician 
had to get his living, and art must necessarily go* by the 
board. Even a great artiste like Ishaq al-Mausili had 

1 Literally, " Without any roughness, nor straightness, nor narrow- 
ness of production." 

Al-Maqqarl, Moh. Dyn., ii, 121. Analectes, ii, 88-9. 
Nicholson, Lit. Hist, of the Arabs, 291. 
*Aghanl,i, 116. 



H2 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

to bow to the demand for the hazaj rhythm, 1 whilst his 
father made his name with the mdkhuri. 2 



HI 

The virtuosi of the " Golden Age " won undying fame. 
How real this has been we know from the pages of the 
'Iqd al-fand, the Kitdb al-aghani, the Fihrist, the Nihdyat 
al-arab, and the Thousand and One Nights. Take away 
those alluring musical interludes, those escapades of the 
virtuosi and the singing girls that we read of in the 
last-named work, and there would be a relish wanting. 

The first great musician of the ' Abbasid era was Hakam 
al-Wadi, or Abu Yahya Hakam ibn Maimun al-Wadi. 
He was a freeman of Al-Walid I (705-15), and was born 
at Wadi al-Qura, his father, of Persian origin, having 
been a hairdresser who amassed a small fortune. On 
his father's death, Hakam became a successful trader in 
oil, but taking a liking for music he went to his com- 
patriot, 'Umar al-Wadi, for lessons, and in due course 
his teacher presented him at the court of Al-Walid II 
(743-44), where his performance brought him a reward 
of one thousand pieces of gold. He remained at court 
until the death of this khalif . After this he languished 
in obscurity until the time of Al-Mansur (754-75) when he 
set out for Baghdad. Here, he was immediately patron- 
ized by the khalif 's cousin, Muhammad ibn AblV Abbas. 
Fame came rather late to him, for he was then over 
fifty years of age. Yet he was recognized as the leading 
musician in the capital. Having made a fortune he re- 
tired to his native town, but he soon returned to Baghdad, 
and was present at the courts of Al-Mahdi (775-85), 
Al-Hadi (785-86), and Harun (786-809). At the court of 
Al-Hadi he managed to defeat Ibrahim al-Mausili and 
Ibn Jami' in a tournament of song, carrying off the first 
prize of 300,000 pieces of silver. Later, Hakam went to 
the court of Prince Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi, then governor 
of Damascus, where he composed no less than 200 

*Aghanl t v, 83, 89, 115. 
*Aghanl, vi, 66. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 113 

melodies for this prince, for which he received 299,000 
pieces of silver. 1 Retiring finally to WadI al-Qura, he died 
about the middle of Harun's reign, at the age of about 8i. 2 
Hakam is classed among the great singers of the Arabs, 3 
and was an acknowledged expert in the hazaj rhythm. 4 

Siyyat (d. 785) was the popular cognomen of Abu 
Wahb 'Abdallah ibn Wahb, a freeman of the Banu 
Khuza/a. He was born at Mecca about 739, and, although 
his career was short, it was a distinguished one. He had 
two excellent teachers who were well versed in the best 
musical traditions of the Orthodox and Umayyad periods. 
These were Yunus al-Katib, the author of the first 
Kitdb al-aghdnt, and Burdan, an old musician who had 
heard 'Azza al-Maila', Ibn Muhriz, Ibn Suraij, Jamila 
and Ma'bad. 5 Siyyat became one of the foremost 
lutenists and singers of his day, as well as being a com- 
poser of repute. 6 During the reign of Al-Mahdi (775-85) 
he established himself in Baghdad, and soon won success 
at court. He died in the prime of life in 785. His two 
greatest pupils were Ibrahim al-Mausili and Ibn Jami'. 
One day the former was asked by his son, Ishaq al- 
Mausill, who was the composer of a certain song, when 
Ibrahim replied, " The composer was a man who, had 
he lived, would not have taken a second place to me or 
to any other musician who is at present favoured by the 
khalif. This melody is by Siyyat." 7 

Yahya al-Makki, or Abu ' Uthman ibn Marzuq al-Makki, 
was a freeman of the House of Umayya and belonged 
to Mecca as his name tells us. He was an estimable 
artiste and was justly considered the doyen of the musicians 
of Al-Hijaz in his day. It was he who taught Ibn Jami', 
Ibrahim al-Mausili, and Fulaih ibn AbiVAura/ the 
classical traditions of the Hijazian music. 8 He was 
present at court from the time of Al-Mahdi (775-85) to 
Al-Ma'mun (813-33). Al-Amin (809-13) thought so 

1 This broken amount was " policy " on the part of the prince. 
To have given as much as the khalif would probably have been con- 
sidered Use majesty. 

" Aghdnl, vi, 64-8. ' Aghdnl, v, 9. 

' Aghdnt, v, 36. vi, 13, 66. B Aghdnl, vii, 141. 

* Aghdnl, v, 9. ''Aghdnl, vi, 7-10. Aghdnl, vi, 17. 



ii4 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

highly of his abilities that he paid him 10,000 pieces of 
silver for one music lesson given to his brother, Prince 
Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi. As a singer, he was praised by 
no less a person than Ibrahim al-Mausill. His fame, 
however, rests more upon his literary work, since his 
Kitab ftl-agham (Book of Songs), comprising the best 
examples of the ancient song (ghina* al-qadim) became 
the standard collection until his son Ahmad issued a re- 
vised edition which comprised some 3,000 songs. Although 
Yahya is classed among the foremost who composed 
works of this kind, Al-Isfahani, the author of the great 
Kitab al-agham, points out that his classification of the 
" modes " displays " confusion." He does not appear 
to have been a careful chronicler, and it is possibly due 
to him, although perhaps more so to 'Amr ibn Bana, 
that so many errors have been perpetuated. There is a 
story told of Ishaq al-Mausili who, knowing how unreliable 
Yahya was as an historian, set a trap for him. One day 
before Harun, Ishaq invented the name of an individual 
and then asked Yahya for information concerning him. 
Yahya began expatiating on this man's genealogy. 
When Ishaq explained that the individual had no ex- 
istence, Yahya/s reputation as a genealogist was at an 
end so far as Harun was concerned. 1 

Abu Ja'far Ahmad ibn Yahya al-Makkl (d. 864), son 
of the above, was " one of the most praiseworthy of the 
narrators (ruwdt) of music (ghind'), and the most learned 
in its science." Not content with revising the work of 
his father 2 he issued a collection known as the Kitab 
mujarradffl-aghani (Book of Choice Songs), which became 
one of the text-books for later investigators. It was 
compiled for Muhammad ibn 'Abdallah ibn Tahir, a 
brother of the musical theorist, and it comprised some 
14,000 songs. As a practical musician he was praised 
by Ishaq al-Mausili, which was the means of his receiving 
a gift of 20,000 pieces of silver from Khalif Al-Mu'tasim 
(833-42). He first appeared at the court of Al-Ma'mun 
(813-33), 3 and finally at that of Al-Mutawakkal (847-61).* 

1 Aghdnl, vi, 16-24. * Aghanl, vi, 17-18. 

Aghanl, v, 104. Aghanl, xiii, 22. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 115 

He is sometimes called Zunain al-Makki 1 and in the 
'Iqd al-farid there is an account of Zunain and two 
other musicians named Al-Hasan al-Masdud and Dubais 
at the house of Abu 'Isa ibn al-Mutawakkal, and here 
they are called " the cleverest men in singing." Ahmad 
ibn Yahya al-Makki died in 864.2 

Ibn Jami', whose full name was Abu'l-Qasim Isma'il 
ibn Jami', was born at Mecca. He was an Arab of noble 
blood, since both his father and mother belonged to the 
house of Sahm, one of the principal branches of the 
Quraish. He was originally destined for a profession 
suitable to one of such a station, and he received an 
excellent education, especially in law, and he knew the 
Qur'an by heart. Whilst he was a youth, he lost his father, 
and his mother having married the musician Siyyat 3 the 
career of a singer soon attracted the young and impres- 
sionable Ibn Jami'. Although his step-father was his 
first teacher, he also received lessons from Yahya al- 
Makki. When Siyyat left Mecca for Baghdad and 
became a favourite at Al-Mahdi's court, Ibn Jami' 
and another of Siyyat's pupils named Ibrahim al-Mausill 
were countenanced by the khalifs sons, Harun and 
Al-Hadi. The khalif, however, fearing lest this liking 
for music by his heirs might offend the people, forbade 
these two young musicians the princes' apartments. 
The instruction was ignored, and Ibn Jami' and Ibrahim 
al-Mausili were arrested. The latter was sentenced to 
300 strokes of the lash, whilst Ibn Jami', protesting 
his noble birth, was banished. " You," cried the khalif, 
" one of the Quraish, and following the profession of 
music! What a disgrace. Out of my sight. Leave 
Baghdad instantly." 4 Ibn Jami' fled to Mecca, but 
when the khalif died (785) and Al-Hadi came to the throne, 
Ibn Jami' was sent for and was presented with 30,000 
pieces of gold. With this fortune, Ibn Jami' thought he 

1 The 'Iqd al-farld has " Zunain." See Guidi, s.v. and also sub 
" Tunain." 

Aghanl, xv, 65-8. 'Iqd al-farld, iii, 191. 

See ante p. 113. 

* " Sovereigns are of the Quraish " runs the tradition. ' Iqd al- 
farld, h, 40. 



n6 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

would retire to Mecca, but through reckless living he 
fell on evil days, and was compelled to take to music once 
more, making an appearance at the court of Harun 
(786-809). Here he found his old fellow pupil, Ibrahim 
al-Mausili, who was the chief court minstrel, and a bitter 
jealousy arose between them. Even the other court 
minstrels took part in this, and two rival parties actually 
existed at court in consequence. There can be little 
doubt that Ibn Jami* was a finished performer, although 
inferior perhaps to his rival. Ibn 'Abd Rabbihi says that 
" Ibrahim al-Mausili was the greatest of the musicians 
in versatility, but Ibn Jami' had the sweetest note/' 1 
Barsauma, a favoured court minstrel, was asked by 
Harun for his opinion of Ibn Jami', when he replied, 
" Why not ask my opinion about honey ? " 2 

Ibrahim al-Mausili or Al-Mausili (d. 804) were the 
usual names given to Ibrahim ibn Mahan (or Maimun) 3 
al-Mausili, who was born at Al-Kufa in 742. He came of 
a noble Persian family, but was brought up by an illus- 
trious Arab of the Banu Tamim. Running away from 
his protector, he settled at Al-Mausil, which gave him his 
surname, and it was here that he took his first music 
lessons. Later he went to Al-Raiy in Northern Persia, 
where he acquired a comprehensive knowledge of both 
Persian and Arabian music (ghina). Here he met a 
representative of Khalif Al-Mansur, who enabled him to 
go to Al-Basra to further prosecute his musical studies. 4 
Finally he directed his steps to Baghdad, where he studied 
under Siyyat. We have already seen how he suffered 
on account of the sons of Al-Mahdi, and when the latter 
died, his successor, Al-HadI (785-86), repaid Ibrahim 
for his punishment on his account by a gift of 150,000 
pieces of gold. With Harun (786-809) he was elevated 
to the foremost position among the court musicians, 
and became the " boon companion " of the khalif, hence 
his nickname Al-Nadim. 5 

1 ' Iqd al-farld, iii, 179. Ibid. Aghanl, vi, 12, 69-92. 

' Mahan was his father's Iranian name, but the Arabs changed it 
to Maimun. 

'Ahlwardt, Abu Nuwds. 

See how he is respected in the Alf laila wa laila, iv, 232. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 117 

The rival camps of Ibrahim al-Mausili and Ibn Jami' 
caused a great stir at court. Among the supporters of 
the former were : Ishaq his son, Zalzal his brother-in-law, 
and Muhammad al-Raff, whilst the latter had Mukhariq 
and 'Aqid among his adherents. An audition was being 
held by Ibrahim one day in which some thirty singing- 
girls were playing their lutes, and Ibn Jami' complained 
that one of them was playing out of tune. Ibrahim 
immediately named the culprit and actually mentioned 
the string that was out of tune. The court was amazed, 
much to the chagrin of Ibn Jami'. 

Ibrahim became extremely rich, for not only did he 
receive a court pension of 10,000 pieces of silver a month, 
but the liberalities of the khalif and nobility in his favour 
almost pass credence. He also derived a large income 
from his lands, and his Music School alone brought him a 
total profit of twenty-four million pieces of silver. His 
mansion was the talk of Baghdad, and one person says, 
" A more spacious and nobler dwelling I had never seen." 1 

As a singer and instrumentalist, Ibrahim was without 
a peer. 2 As a composer he also stood unrivalled, and no 
less than 900 compositions stood to his credit. 3 Ibn 
Khallikan credits him with the introduction of "several 
new modes." 4 Other writers say that he was the first 
to make a name with the makhun rhythmic mode. 5 
When the great musician was on his deathbed, Khalif 
Harun was ever present, and at his funeral the piayers 
were recited by Al-Ma'mun himself. Besides his son 
Ishaq, he had several eminent pupils, and among them : 
Zalzal, Mukhariq, 'Alluyah, Abu Sadaqa, Sulaim ibn 
Sallam and Muhammad ibn al-Harith. The name of 
Ibrahim al-Mausili has been made famous in the West 
as well as in the East by the Thousand and One Nights. 6 

1 Iqd al-farld, iii, 188. 

1 'Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., i, 21. Cf. 'Iqd al-fartd, iii, 188. 

8 Aghanl, v, 17. xviii, 176. 

Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., i, 21. 

Aghanl, vi, 66. Al-Mas'udi, viii, 98. 

A If laila wa laila, iii, 388. This is his adventure with the Devil, 
told also in the Aghanl, v, 36, and by Al-Ghuzuli, i, 241. His escapade 
with the singing-girls (Aghanl, v, 41 ; Al-Ghuzuji, i, 243 ; Ibn Badrun, 
272), is told in the Alf laila wa laila, ii, 437, of his son Ishaq. 

I 



n8 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

Yazid Haura' Abu Khalid was a musician of Al-Medina, 
and a freeman of the Banii Laith ibn Bakr. Settling in 
Baghdad, he made a reputation at the court of Al-Mahdi 
(775-85). His voice was of an extraordinary quality and 
Ibrahim al-Mausili employed him at his Music School, 
but it is said that Yazid was unable to impart to his pupils 
the secret of his charming vocalization. He excelled also 
as a composer, and both Ibrahim al-Mausili and Ibn 
Jami' sang his compositions. Harun (786-809) was 
devoted to Yazid, and on the deathbed of the latter the 
khalif never failed to send his chief eunuch to enquire each 
day after his favourite. He was a personal friend of the 
poets Abul-'Atahiya and Abu Malik al-A'raj, and it was 
the latter who wrote the elegaic verses on his death. As 
an all-round musician, he is ranked with Ibrahim al- 
MausilT and Ibn Jami'. 1 

Zalzal, or Mansur Zalzal al-Darib (d. 791), 2 was a very 
important musician of the early 'Abbasid period. The 
author of the 'Iqd says of him, " Zalzal was the most 
pleasant of the stringed instrumentalists, and there was 
not his equal either before or after." 3 Ishaq al-Mausili 
testified at the court of Al-Wathiq, that Zalzal had no 
equal as a lutenist. 4 He was the special accompanist of 
Ibrahim al-Mausili, whose brother-in-law he was, and 
apparently his forte was as an accompanist, hence his 
surname (al-Darib), since he did not sing much. 5 He 
is better known in musical history as a reformer of the 
scale, for it was he who introduced the famous neutral 
third (22:27) on the l ute - He was also the inventor of a 
" perfect lute " called the 'ud al-shabbut, which super- 
seded the Persian lute hitherto in use. Unfortunately, 
he incurred the displeasure of Harun and was flung into 
prison, where he languished for years. On his release 

1 Aghant, iii, 73-75. 

Carra de Vaux, Traits des rapports, 56, and Caussin de Perceval, 
J.A., Novembre-Decembre, 1873, p. 548, write Zolzol. The above 
however, is the pronunciation indicated in the Mafdtlh al-ulum, 239. 
Guidi writes Zilzil. See also Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., i, 21. Land, 
Recherches, 61, Von Hammer, Lit. der Arab., iii, 764. 

'Iqd al-farld, iii, 190. 

1 Aghanl, v, 57-8. 

1 Cf . ' Iqd al-farld, iii, 190. 



THE 'ABBASIDS Tig 

his beard was quite white, and his health was ruined. He 
died in 791. 1 During his lifetime Zalzal had a well dug 
at Baghdad, and at his death he left this to the people 
of Baghdad with sufficient funds to keep it in repair. 
For centuries it was known as the Birkat al-Zalzal.* 

Fulaih ibn Abf l-'Aura' was a native of Mecca and a 
freeman of the Banu Makhzum. He was a pupil of Yahya 
al-Makki, and was considered one of the chief singers at 
the court of Al-Mahdi (775-85), being the only musician 
(so it is said) who appeared before that khalif without the 
customary curtain. He was one of the three musicians 
commissioned by Harun (786-809) to make a collection 
of songs for him, his collaborators being Ibrahim al- 
Mausill and Ibn Jami'. The collection was called 
" The Hundred Songs/' 3 Ishaq al-Mausili praises him as 
a singer. 4 Among his pupils were the songstresses 
Badhl and Dananir. 5 

Prince Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi, Abu Ishaq (779-839) was 
the younger brother of Harun, but by another mother, 
whose name was Shikla. Born at Baghdad, he received 
a very careful education, and his profound knowledge 
of the poets, the sciences, jurisprudence, dialectic, and 
traditions, is commented on by the annalists. His 
abilities as a musician, however, outshone all these other 
accomplishments. Losing his father, Al-Mahdi, when six 
years of age, and being confided to his mother's care, 
Ibrahim was nurtured in the hanm, where music played 
so large a part. His mother, who came from Al-Dailam, 
was a musician, and so was Maknuna the mother of his 
step-sister 'Ulayya. So we find these two spoilt children 
being initiated very early into the practice of music. 
Harun himself evinced extreme interest in the musical 
education of his brother and sister, and although it was 
not considered " good form " for a Muslim of any social 
standing to indulge in the profane art of music, yet 
Harun encouraged them to perform before liim, and was 

1 Aghanl, v, 22-24. 

1 Lc Strange, op. cit., 62. 

8 Aghanl, iv, 98-101. 

* Aghanl, v, 9. 

* Aghanl, xv, 144. xvii, 77. 



120 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

even delighted to see them competing with the court 
musicians. 1 

When Al-Amin became khalif (809) he sent for his musi- 
cal nephew Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi, so that his court 
might have the benefit of his talents. After the accession 
of Al-Ma'mun, Ibrahim allowed himself to be proclaimed 
khalif during the Baghdad rebellion of 817, The glory 
was but short-lived, and the would-be khalif sought safety 
in flight, but, apprehended, 2 he begged for his life at the 
feet of Al-Ma'mun. It was granted him, and henceforth 
the prince was only known as a professional musician. 3 
For a time, however, musicians were banned at court, 
as we have seen. 4 

Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi eventually became the leader of 
the Persian Romantic music movement, and through it 
there began an historic struggle between this school and 
that of Ishaq al-Mausili, who stood for the old Arabian 
traditional school. Ibrahim continued as favourite at 
court until the time of Al-Mu'tasim. Two of his sons, 
Yusuf and Hibat Allah, published biographical notices 
of their illustrious father, the former going out of his 
way to calumniate Ishaq al-Mausili, his father's rival, 
an act justly condemned by the author of the great 
Kitab al-agham. The other son, however, was a fount of 
information for the latter author. Among the most 
notable pupils of Ibrahim were Muhammad ibn al- 
Harith and 'Amr ibn Bana. 

Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi had a magnificent voice of tre- 
mendous power, 5 with a compass of three octaves. 6 
" No other singer in the world was capable of this feat/' 
says Al-Isfahani. As a theorist and instrumental per- 
former he was of outstanding ability. The Kitab al- 
aghani says, " Ibrahim was one of the most proficient of 

1 Both Ibrahim al-Mausill and Ibn Jami* acknowledged the clever- 
ness of the young prince. Aghdnl, ix, 51. 

The Aghdnl and the Arabian Nights (Burton, 274th night), both 
say that Prince Ibrahim was denounced to the authorities by Ibrahim 
al-Mausili. This cannot be correct, since the latter had been dead for 
many years. 

* Aghdnl, ix, 60-1. * Aghdnl, ix, 60-1. 

Aghdnl, ix, 51, 72. Even Ishaq al-Mausili conceded his talents. 
Aghdnl, v, 119. * Aghdnl, ix, 51. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 121 

mankind in the art of the notes (nagham), in the know- 
ledge of the rhythms (tqd'dt), and in performing on stringed 
instruments." He even essayed to play the mizmdr 
(reed-pipe) and the tabl (drum). 1 

Mukhariq (d, ca. 845) or Abu'1-Mahanna' Mukhariq 
ibn Yahya, 2 was born at Al-Medina (or Al-Kufa), and 
was a slave of 'Atika bint Shudha, a famous songstress. 
From her, Mukhariq received his first lessons in music, 
and was purchased for Fadl al-Barmaki, who, in turn, 
passed him on to Harun. Ibrahim al-Mausili took him 
as a pupil and Harun gave him his freedom. Soon after 
this he won high favour at court, was rewarded with 
100,000 pieces of gold, and honoured with a seat by the 
side of the khalif himself. 3 Al-Amin (809-13) had 
Mukhariq at his court. One day this capricious monarch 
was riding in his manege to the music of his military band 
of pipes (surndydt) and drums (tubill), and he commanded 
Mukhariq to sing along with these instrumentalists. 
This was kept up continuously during the night, the 
khalif being absolutely indifferent to the fatigue of this 
demand. 4 Under Al-Ma'mun (813-33), Al-Mu'tasim 
(833-42), and Al-Wathiq (842-47), he remained a conspicu- 
ous favourite at court, and he appears to have died in 
845. He was a close friend of the poet Abu'l-'Atahiya, 
who, on his deathbed, sent for Mukhariq, that he might 
hear the great singer intone those verses of his which had 
been set to Mukhariq's music, beginning, " When my life 
closes, the sorrow of women will be short/' 5 Ibn 
Taghrlbirdi says in his Nujum al-zdhira that whilst 
Ibrahim al-Mausili and his son Ishaq sang well to the 
accompaniment of the 'ud, in pure vocal work Mukhariq 
outshone them both. 

Muhammad ibn al-Harith ibn Buskhunr (or Buskhun- 
nar) 6 Abu Ja'far was of foreign extraction, since his 

1 Aghanl, xiv, 54. 

Cf. Ibn Khalhkan, Biog. Diet., i, 18. Kosegarten, Lib. Cant., 30. 
Von Hammer, Lit. der Arab., iii, 784. 

Aghdnl, viii, 20. * Aghanl, xvi, 139. See ante, p. 109. 

Aghanl, xxi, 220-56. 

Both the Bulaq and SasI editions of the Aghanl have Bashkhir or 
Shakhfr, but the Tashfy kitdb al-aghdnl has Buskhunnar and the 
Nihdyat al-arab has Buskhunr. 



122 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

family came from Al-Raiy. His father, who had been a 
judge (qadi), was fond of music and was noted for his 
singing-girls. 1 At first, Muhammad contented himself 
with the ''improvisation/' but he became the pupil of 
Ibrahim al-Mausili and we find him playing on the mi'zafa 
(? psaltery) and later on the 'ud (lute), which he learned 
from Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi. When al-Ma'mun pardoned 
the latter for his treachery in 817-19, he made him 
virtually a prisoner within the palace under the charge of 
the wazir Muhammad ibn Mazdad. The latter appointed 
Muhammad ibn al-Harith to see that the prince did not 
break his parole. It was this musician who was able to 
persuade the khalif to remove this irksome surveillance. 2 
One day, however, Muhammad sang some verses in praise 
of the Umayyads which so enraged the khalif that the 
latter ordered the imprudent musician to be beheaded, 
and it was with the utmost difficulty that the wazir 
was able to stay the hand of the khalif. Muhammad 
ibn al-Harith appears to have lived to a ripe old age, 
since we find him at the court of Al-Wathiq (842-47). 3 
Abu Sadaqa, or Miskln ibn Sadaqa, was a minstrel of 
Al-Medma. Called to the court of Harun (780-809), he 
won a considerable reputation as a story-teller as well as 
a musician. His talents are said to have been discovered 
by Ibrahim al-Mausili. Historians say that he was 
particularly clever in the extemporization (iqtirdh) and 
in the rhythmic modes (tqadt), which, like the earlier 
musicians, he marked with a qadib (wand). At a concert 
given before Harun, when most of the virtuosi were pre- 
sent, the khalif commanded that a certain song should be 
performed by each of them in turn. None of the rendi- 
tions pleased the " Commander of the Faithful " until 
the sattdr or " Guardian of the Curtain/' commanded 
Abu Sadaqa to sing. At the conclusion, the khalif 
showered the most extravagant encomiums on this min- 
strel, and, drawing aside the curtain, listened to a story 
from the lips of Abu Sadaqa concerning the origin of this 
particular song. His son, Sadaqa ibn Abl Sadaqa, and 

1 Aghdni, xx, 83. Aghdni, ix, 61. 

Aghdni, x, 161-4. xx, 82. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 123 

his grandson, Ahmad ibn Sadaqa ibn Abi Sadaqa, 
both became celebrated minstrels. 1 

'Alluyah (or 'Allawaya) 2 al-A'sr Abu'l-Hasan 'AH ibn 
'Abdallah ibn Saif was a freeman of the House of Umayya. 
He belonged to Al-Medlna, and was a grandson of a musi- 
cian named Saif, who lived in the days of Al-Walid ibn 
'Uthman ibn 'Affan. He was taught music by Ibrahim 
al-Mausili and became a skilful performer. His first 
court appearance was with Harun (786-809), who, on 
one occasion, punished him. 3 With Al-Amm (809-13) 
he was shown some partiality, although once again 
punishment fell upon him. Al-Ma'mun (813-33) a l so 
extended his patronage to 'Alluyah, and it was through 
the latter that Ishaq al-Mausili was re-instated in the 
khalif 's good graces after a long estrangement. 4 When the 
Romantic movement, headed by Prince Ibrahim ibn 
al-Mahdi, took definite form, 'Alluyah joined this party, 
and he and Ishaq al-Mausili became enemies. 5 Yet 
after the prince's death these two great virtuosi patched 
up their differences. In the 'Iqd al-farid, 'Alluyah is 
blamed for the introduction of Persian notes into Arabian 
music, 6 and it was this which eventually contributed to 
the loss of much of the classical music of Arabia. 7 
'Alluyah died in the reign of Al-Mutawakkil (847-61). 8 

Al-Zubair ibn Dahman was a musician of Mecca and 
a freeman of the Banu Laith ibn Bakr. His father was a 
well-known musician of the Umayyads. Although suc- 
cessful in commercial life, he became enamoured with 
music, and in the reign of Harun (786-809) he was called 
to court. Here he took part in the rivalry between the 
factions of Prince Ibrahim and Ishaq al-Mausili, both he 
and his brother 'Abdallah, 9 also a court musician, joining 
the former party. Ishaq, however, paid a warm tribute 
to his ability, and Harun bestowed his favours. On one 
occasion it was a musical setting of Al-Zubair to a pre- 

1 Aghanl, xxi, 153-64. Al-Mas'udl, 342-47. 

See Nihdyat al-ardb, v, Fihrist. Aghanl, v, 45. 

Aghanl, v, 106. 'Iqd al-farid, iii, 188. 
5 Aghanl , v, 60, 64, 91. 

'Iqd al-favld, iii, 188. 

7 Aghanl , i, 2. * Aghanl, x, 120-32. * Aghani, xx, 144-5. 



124 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

scribed piece of verse that carried off the prize of 20,000 
pieces of silver, with twenty competitors. 1 Among his 
pupils was the songstress Qalam al-Salahiyya. 2 

Ishaq al-Mausili (767-850) or in full Abu Muhammad 
Ishaq ibn Ibrahim al-Mausili, became the chief court 
musician on the death of his father. Born at Al-Raiy in 
767, he came to Baghdad with his father. He received 
a fine education, and we are told that he began his daily 
studies with the traditions under the guidance of Hushaim 
ibn Bushair. The next hour took him to Al-Kisa'i and 
Al-Farra' for the study of the Qur'dn. His uncle Zalzal 
then initiated him into the craft of the lutenist, and the 
science of the rhythmic modes (iqd'dt). He then passed 
into the hands of 'Atika bint Shudha, the famous song- 
stress, who taught him her art. Finally, he closed his 
day's studies with Al-Ama'i and Abu 'Ubaida ibn al- 
Muthanna, from whom he learned history and belles 
lettres. 

His attainments were such that, as soon as he was 
old enough, he was admitted to the circle of the court 
minstrels by Harun (786-809) and the Barmakids, all 
of whom lavished untold wealth and unprecedented 
favours upon him. Each succeeding khalif seemed 
anxious to outdo his predecessor in paying honour to 
this savant musician. Much of his reputation was also 
due to his gifts outside of music, for his talents as a poet, 
litterateur, philologist, and jurisconsult, won deserved 
appreciation. Al-Ma'mun (813-33) was so impressed 
that he said, " Were Ishaq not so publicly known as a 
musician, I would have appointed him a judge (qddi), 
for he is more deserving of it than any of the judges 
that we now have, and he surpasses them all in virtuous 
conduct, piety and honesty." Al-Ma'mun permitted 
Ishaq to take his stand with litterateurs and savants 
at the court receptions (majdlis), and not with the musicians 
who held a lower rank. Later, he granted him the pri- 
vilege of wearing the black 'Abbasid robes, which were 
reserved for legists, and he even allowed him to assist 

1 Aghanl, xvii, 73-8. 
" ~ I, xii, 115. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 125 

at the Friday prayer from the tribune of the khalif. 
Al-Wathiq (842-47) said, " Ishaq never yet sang to me 
but what I felt that my possessions were increased." 
When Ishaq died in 850, x from the results of the Ramadan 
fast, Al-Mutawakkil (847) paid this tribute, " With the 
death of Ishaq my Empire is deprived of an ornament 
and a glory." 

As an all-round musician, Ishaq was the greatest 
that Islam had produced. Although his voice was pro- 
bably not so good in quality as some of his contemporaries, 
yet his absolute artistry gave him a decided superiority. 
As an instrumentalist he certainly was supreme. As a 
theorist, whilst he may not have been a scientific thinker 
like Al-Kindi, yet he was able to reduce the conflicting 
theories of the practice of the art to a definite system. 
This we are told was accomplished " without his having 
known a solitary book of the Ancients (awd'il)," meaning 
the Greeks. As a litterateur his library was one of the 
largest in Baghdad, and it was especially rich in Arabic 
lexicography. 2 

The Fihrist places nearly forty works to his pen, 
and in this monumental work, written at the close of the 
tenth century, Ishaq is described as " a recorder of 
poetry and antiquities ... a poet, clever in the art of 
music (ghina), and versatile in the sciences. " Among 
his books on music and musicians were : Book of Songs 
sung by Ishdq, Book of Stories of 'Azza al-Maila , Book 
of the Songs of Ma' bad, Book of Stories of Hunain al- 
Hiri* Book of Stories of Tuwais, Book of Stories of Ibn 
Mis j ah, Book of Stories of Al-Daldl, Book of Stories of 
Ibn 'A'isha, Book of Stories of Al-Abjar, Book of the 
Selected Songs of Al-Wathiq, Book of Dancing (Kitdb 
al-raqas wa'l-zafari), Book of Notes and Rhythm (Kitdb 
al-nagham wa'l-iqd'), Book of the Singing-Girls of Al- 
ffijdz, Book of the Singing-Girls, Book of Stories of Ma' bad 
and Ibn Suraij and their Songs, Book of Stories of Al- 
Gharid, and the Grand Book of Songs. This last-named 

1 Abu'l Fida' says 828. 

2 He allowed a pension to Ibn al-'Arabl, the lexicographer. 
The text has Al-Khlrl. 



126 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

book, which became very popular, was not entirely from 
the pen of Ishaq, but was a compilation by a bookseller 
named Sindi ibn 'All. Only the licence (rukhsa) was by 
Ishaq, the remaining material being selected from his 
other works by this editor. Biographies of Ishaq 
al-Mausili were written by his son Hammad, and by 
'All ibn Yahya ibn Abi Mansur, and others. 1 

Al-Khalil ibn Ahmad (718-791), one of the famous 
scholars of the Al-Basra school of Arabic philology, was 
perhaps the only great musical theorist of his day. 
He is universally known as the compiler of the first 
Arabic lexicon, the Kitab al-ain, and the systematizer 
of the rules of prosody. His investigations into the science 
of music were made public in two works a Kitab al- 
nagham (Book of Notes) and a Kitab al-iqa 1 (Book of 
Rhythm). 2 Hamza ibn al-Hasan al-Isfahani (tenth 
cent.) says of him, " Islam never produced a more active 
spirit than Al-Khalil for the discovery of the sciences 
which were unknown, even in their first principles, to 
be learned by the Arabs." 3 

Hunain ibn Ishaq al-'Ibadi, Abu Zaid (809-73), was a 
Christian belonging to the 'Ibad of Al-HIra. In this city, 
where his father was an apothecary, Hunain received his 
earliest education. He then proceeded to Baghdad and 
became a pupil of the famous physician Yahya ibn 
Masawaihi. His education was completed in Asia Minor, 
where he learned Greek. Returning to Baghdad he 
entered the Bait al-hikma (College of Science) in the service 
of the Banu Musa. Later he became personal physician 
to Al-Mutawakkil (d. 861). Hunain became famous for 
his translations of Greek works into Syriac and Arabic. 4 
It is highly probable that some of the Greek treatises on 
music that were known in Arabic, were his translations. 
We certainly know that the Arab theorists learned much 
of the physical and physiological aspects of the theory of 

1 Aghanl, v, 52-131. Fihrist, 141-3. 'Iqd al-farld t iii, 188. Nihdyat 
al-arab, v, 1-9. 

Fihrist, 43. 

Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., i, 494. 

Fihrist, 294. Ibn al-Qiftl. Ibn Abi Uaibi'a, i, 184. Ibn 
Khallikan, Biog. Diet., i, 478. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 127 

sound from Hunain's translations of Aristotle's De anima 
(Kitab fi'l-nafs), Historic* animalium (Kitab al-hayawdri) t 
and Galen's De voce (Kitab al-saut), although the first 
two had already been dealt with by Yuhanna ibn Batriq 
(d. Sis). 1 The Staatsbibliothek at Munich possesses an 
Arabic MS. by Hunain, which contains material on music 
gathered from the Greeks. 2 It was also translated into 
Hebrew. 3 

Al-Kindi, whose full name was Abu Yusuf Ya'qub 
ibn Ishaq al-Kindi (d. ca. 874), was an Arab of noble 
descent. He was born at Al-Basra about 790, and rose to 
favour in the days of Al-Ma'mun (813-33) an d Al-Mu'tasim 
(833-42). Under the orthodox reaction in the reign 
of Al-Mutawakkil (847-61) his identification with the 
Mu'tazilites led to the confiscation of his library. Al- 
Kindi has been called " The Philosopher of the Arabs " by 
his own countrymen, since he seems to have been the first 
to have devoted special attention to natural phenomena 
from a rationalist standpoint. 4 He was a voluminous 
writer, and among his books on music are : a Kitab 
risdlat al-kiibri Ji talif (Grand Treatise on Composition), 
Kitab risdla fl tartlb al-nagham( Treatise on the Arrange- 
ment of the Notes), Kitab risdla fl'l-lqd' (Treatise on 
Rhythm), Kitab risdla fl'l-madkhal ild sind'at al-muslql 
(Introduction to the Art of Music), Kitab risdla fl khubr 
sind'at al-ta'Kf (Information concerning the Art of 
Composition), Kitab risdla f I akhbdr 'an sind'at al-muslql 
(Stories about the Art of Music), Mukhtasar al-musiqi 
fl tallf al-nagham wa san'at al-ud (Compendium of 
Music in the Composition of Melodies and the Art of the 
Lute.) 6 

Three if not four of these works have come down 
to us, although the titles are slightly different. In the 
British Museum we have a Risdla f I khubr ta'lif al-alhdn* 
and the Berlin Staatsbibliothek has a Risdla fi ijzd* 

1 Wenrich, De auct. Graec., 129, 253. 

1 No. 651 (Aumer) fols. 25, V.-3Q. 

* See A. Lowenthal, Hmiain ibn Iscliaqs Sinnspruche der Philosophen . . . 

4 Steiner, Die Mu'tazihten, 15. 

6 Fihrist, 255-7. Ibn al-Qifti, 370. Ibn Abi Uaibi'a, i, 210. 

Bnt. Mus., Or. 2361. 



128 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

khabariyya al-mmiqi* and a Risdla ff'l-luhun. 2 Another 
work in this library may also be by Al-Kindl. 3 In the 
British Museum MS. there is another work mentioned 
by name a Kitdb al-'azm fl ta'lif al-luhun. 4 Al-KindTs 
treatises had a fairly considerable influence on later writers 
for two centuries at least. 5 

The Banu Musa, whose names were Muhammad 
(d. 873), Ahmad, and Al-Hasan, were the sons of Musa 
ibn Shakir, one of the first algebraists. They were among 
the most celebrated scholars of their day, and were at 
the Bait al-hikma (a college founded at Baghdad by Al- 
Ma'mun) contemporary with Yahya ibn Abi Mansur 
(d. ca. 831). In the Fihrist we read that their favourite 
sciences were geometry, mechanics, music, and astron- 
omy/' Ibn Khallikan also assures us that music and 
mechanics were among their accomplishments. Yet, 
not a solitary work on music is mentioned under their 
name in the Fihrist, nor by Ibn al-Qifti, unless the 
Kitdb al-urghanun (Book on the Organ), mentioned in 
another part of the Fihrist in connection with them, 
is to be placed to their credit. 6 Casiri mentions a Liber 
de musica on their account, but the treatise corresponds 
in the text with a Kitdb al-qarastun which has no concern 
with music. 7 One musical work by the Banu Musa 
has fortunately survived. It is a treatise on automatic 
musical instruments, including the hydraulic organ. 
The MS. is preserved at the Greek Orthodox College 
at Bairut known as " The Three Moons/' The work is 
entitled Al-dlat illati tuzammir binafsihd (The Instrument 
which Plays by Itself), the text of which has been pub- 
lished in the Mashriq. B 

Ziryab was the nickname of Abu'l-Hasan 'All ibn 

Berlin MS., Ahlwardt, 5503. Berlin MS., Ahlwardt, 5531. 

Berlin MS., Ahlwardt, 5530. 

4 Brit. Mus. MS., Or. 2361, fol. 165, v. 

Brit. Mus. MS., Or. 2361, fol. 229, v. Fihrist, 285. 

7 See Dozy, Suppl. Diet. Arabes, sub " Qarastun." Suter, Math. 
Verz. im Fihrist, 20. Steinschneider, Die Arab. Ueber. 

Fihrist, 271. Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., hi, 315. Ibn al-Qifti, 441. 
Casiri, i, 418. Al-Mashriq, xvi, 444. See the present author's work 
entitled The Organ of the Ancients from Eastern Sources, F. Hauser's 
Vber das Kitdb al-hijal . . . der Benu Musa, and Centenario della nascita 
di M. Amari, 11, 169. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 129 

Nafi'. It was given him " on account of his dark com- 
plexion and his eloquence of speech/' 1 He was the most 
famous musician among the Western Arabs of Al-Andalus. 
We first read of him at Baghdad, as a freeman of Al- 
Mahdl (775-85) and a pupil of Ishaq al-Mausili, although 
he did not make his first appearance at court until the 
time of Harun (786-809), where his remarkable person- 
ality, quite apart from his musical talents, so struck the 
khalif that he was predicted as the coming master. 
At his first audition before Harun, he refused to play on 
the lute of his teacher, Ishaq al-Mausili, and insisted on 
using his own, which he said was of different structure. 2 
Ziryab soon captured Harun's fancy, and this aroused 
the jealousy of Ishaq, who immediately gave Ziryab 
to understand that he would not tolerate a rival at court, 
and insisted on his leaving Baghdad. It would have 
been folly to have defied so eminent a man as Ishaq, 
and so the young minstrel emigrated to the West 
(North Africa), where he soon rose to fame. Whilst in 
the service of Ziyadat Allah I (816-37), the Aghlabid 
sultan of Qairawan, near Tunis, he sang a song of 'Antara 
one day. It was the one beginning, " If my mother 
were as black as a crow/' and the sultan was so furious 
at this verse that he had Ziryab whipped and banished. 
The musician then crossed the Mediterranean and entered 
Al-Andalus, where the sultan, 'Abd al-Rahman II 
(822-52), took him into his service. So says the author 
of the 'Iqd al-farid* 

Al-Maqqari says that it was in the year 821 that 
Ziryab landed at Algeciras, and offered his talents to 
sultan Al-Hakam I (796-822), who immediately sent one 
of his court musicians, a Jew, Al-Mansur, to invite him 
to Cordova. Just then the sultan died, but his successor, 
'Abd al-Rahman II, equally anxious to obtain Ziryab's 
services, confirmed the previous invitation. Great respect 
was paid to Ziryab during his journey to Cordova, and 
the sultan himself actually rode out of the city to meet 

1 Ziryab is the name for a dark bird that has a sweet note. In 
Persian it stands for a solution of gold for gilding. 
1 See ante, p. 108. 'Iqd al-farld, iii, 189. 



130 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

him. 1 For several months he was feted at the palace, 
and finally he was lodged in a splendid mansion with a 
pension and emoluments amounting to 40,000 pieces of 
gold annually. 

Ziryab soon eclipsed all other musicians in Al-Andalus. 
Al-Maqqari says, " Ziryab was deeply versed in every 
branch of art connected with music, and was, moreover, 
gifted with such a prodigious memory that he knew by 
heart upwards of one thousand songs, with their appro- 
priate airs : a greater number than that recorded [?] 
by Ptolemy, who established rules on the science of music, 
and wrote upon it." Ziryab, like many of the other 
musicians, believed that the jinn (genii) taught him his 
songs in the middle of the night. When thus inspired, 
he would call his two favourite singing-girls, Ghazzalan 
and Hinda, and bid them commit to memory the music 
which had come to him by these means. 

Like Ishaq al-Mausill, the gieat Ziryab " had a deep 
acquaintance with the various branches of polite litera- 
ture. He was likewise learned in astronomy and in 
geography/' 2 Indeed, his accomplishments were such 
that Al-Maqqari says, " There never was, either before 
or after him, a man of his profession who was more 
generally beloved and admired/' He introduced plectra 
of eagles' talons instead of those of wood, and added a 
fifth string to the lute. 3 His greatest fame was made 
through his Music School at Cordova, which became the 
conservatory of Andalusian music, 4 and its pupils were 
looked upon as one of the glories of the country. 5 The 
date of Ziryab's death is not recorded, but it is doubtful 
whether he lived later than the reign of Muhammad 
(852-86). His sons and daughters became well-known 
musicians. * 

Al-Andalus had a few other well-known musicians who 
deserve mention. 

1 Ibn Khaldun, Prolegomena, ii, 361. 

This was requisite for those who taught the influence of the " Music 
of the Spheres " and its cosmical potency. See my Influence of Music : 
From Arabic Sources. 

Al-Maqqarl, Moh. Dyn., ii, 116-21. 

4 Ibid., ii, 117. Von Hammer, op. cit., iv, 727. 
Ibn Khaldun, ii, 361. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 131 

'Alun and Zarqun were " the first of the musicians 
who entered Al-Andalus [from the East] in the days of 
Al-Hakam I (796-822), and they were maintained by him 
[at his court]/' They became the most eminent of the 
virtuosi until Ziryab came and wrested the laurels from 
them. 1 

'Abbas ibn al-Nasa'I was the chief musician at the 
court of Al-Hakam I, and he is mentioned as the singer of 
the songs of this sultan. 

Al-Mansur was a Jewish musician who stood high in 
favour at the court of Al-Hakam I. It was he who was 
sent to conduct Ziryab to Cordova. 2 

Among the minor musicians in the Baghdad khalifate 
at this period were the following : 

Muhammad ibn Hamza Abu Ja'far was a freeman of 
Al-Mansur (754-75). He was a pupil of Ibrahim al- 
Mausili and was counted " among the foremost of the 
singers, players, and story-tellers of the day." He was 
at the court of Harun (786-809). 3 

Isma'il ibn al-Harbidh was a freeman of the Banu 
Zubair ibn al-'Awwam or the Banu Kinana, and he sang at 
the courts from the time of Al-Walid II (743-4) to Harun. 4 

Sulaim ibn Sallam Abu ' Abdallah belonged to Al-Kufa, 
and was an intimate friend of Abu Muslim and Ibrahim 
al-Mausili. He possessed "an excellent voice." 5 

Barsauma al-Zamir was a pupil of Ibrahim al-Mausili 
and a talented performer on the zamr or mizmdr (reed- 
pipe). He seems to have been trusted as a critic of con- 
temporary musicians by Harun. 6 

Zunam was also a famous performer on the mizmdr , 
and he is mentioned in the i8th maqdma of Al-Hariri, 
as a well-known musician. He was also the inventor of 
a reed-pipe called the nay zundmi or nay zuldmt, as the 
Western Arabs misnamed it. He was at the courts of 
Harun, Al-Mu'tasim and Al-Wathiq. 7 

1 Ibid. * Al-Maqqari, Analectes, ii, 85. 

8 Aghanl, v, 45. xvi, 226. 

4 Aghanl, vi, 150. 6 Aghanl, vi, 12-15. 

Aghanl, v, 34. yi, 12. 'Iqd al-farld, iii, 188. He is called Jussun 
by Von Hammer, Lit. der Arab., iii, 766, and Fe*tis, ii, 14. 

7 Steingass, Assemblies of ffarlrl, i, 137. Chenery, Assemblies of 
Al-ffarirt, 209. Cf. Ency. of Islam, ii, 136. 



132 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

Muhammad ibn ' Amr al-Raff (or al-Ziqq) was a freeman 
of the Banu Tamim and came from Al-Kufa. He was a 
fine performei on the 'ud, and a man of handsome appear- 
ance. He was a partisan of Ibrahim al-Mausili against 
the rival clique of Ibn Jami'. 1 

'Amr al-Ghazzal, 2 Al-Husain ibn Muhriz, 3 Muhammad 
ibn Da'ud ibn Ismail, 4 and 'Abd al-Rahim ibn Fadl 
al-Daffaf, 5 were at Harun's court, whilst Ma'bad al- 
Yaqtini, 8 Ja'far al-Tabbal, 7 and Abu Zakkar 8 were the 
favoured minstiels of the Barmakids. 

The singing-girls and songstresses of the " Golden 
Age ' ' were even more famous than those of the Umayyad 
days, as we know from the pages of The Thousand and 
One Nights, although, strange to say, most of the names 
handed down in this entertaining work have no place 
in the Kitdb al-aghanl t Nihdyat al-arab> and kindred 
works. 

Basbas (" Caress ") was a half-caste singing-girl of 
Yahya ibn Naffs, who was famed for his concerts at 
Al-Medlna. Here 'Abdallah ibn Mus'ab heard Basbas 
sing, which led him to compose verses specially for her. 
It was these verses that so charmed Khalif Al-Mansur 
(754-75) that he learned them by heart. Ibn Khurdadhbih 
avers that Al-Mahdi (775-85) bought Basbas from Yahya 
whilst he was a prince for 17,000 pieces of gold. Whilst 
she was at Al-Medina she was the idol of the Quraish, 
and her beauty was praised by the poets. 9 

'Uraib (d. 841) was a songstress who had a most ex- 
traordinary career, which deserves recording as it gives 
an insight into the social life of the peiiod. Handsome, 
accomplished as poetess, writer and musician, 'Uraib 
won a tremendous reputation. She " surpassed all the 
songstresses of Al-Hijaz and was particularly skilful in 
the art and science of the notes (nagham), and stringed 

1 Aghdnl, xiii, 19-22. See Guidi, 601. 

Aghanl, xi, 34. xx, 64. * Aghanl, vi, 12. xiii, 9. 
4 Aghanl, iii, 57. xxi, 226. 

8 Aghanl, iii, 80-81. See Guidi, 435. 

Aghanl, xii, 168-70. Nihdyat al-arab, v, 13. 
7 Aghanl, xiv, 54. 

Aghanl, vi, 212. Al-Mas'udI, vi, 359. Ibn Khallikan, i, 317. 

Aghanl , xiii, 114-18. Nihdyat al-arab, v, 70. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 133 

instruments (awtdr)." She is ranked with 'Azza al- 
Maila* and Jamila of old. Ishaq al-Mausili said that he 
knew of no better performer on the 'ud (lute), nor a more 
gracious or artistic woman. She is credited with 
knowing 21,000 melodies by heart. Her first owner was 
'Abdallah ibn Isma'il, Captain of the Galleys under 
Harun, but she fled with a lover to Baghdad. Here 
she sang in the public gardens, but was discovered and 
compelled to return to her master. She was then acquired 
by Al-Amin (809-13), and at his death she reverted to her 
old proprietor, but again fled with a lover, who married 
her. Al-Ma'mun (813-33) then possessed her, and at his 
court she held a high place as a musician. Under 
Al-Mu'tasim (833) she was still captivating all hearts 
and minds by her beauty and accomplishments. She 
died in 841. Al-Mu'tamid (870-92) ordered a collection 
of her songs to be made. 1 

'Ubaida, surnamed al-Tunburiyya, was " one of the 
best of the songstresses and the foremost of them in art 
and literature." Ishaq al-Mausill said, " In the art of 
tunbur playing, anyone who seeks to go beyond 'Ubaida 
makes mere noise." Jahza al-Barmaki, the historian 
of the tunburists, remarked that 'Ubaida was " an ex- 
cellent musician and a remarkable virtuoso/' She re- 
ceived her first lessons from a certain Al-Zubaidi al-Tunburi, 
who used to stay at her father's house. On her parents' 
death she became a public singer, visiting all and sundry 
for a few coins. She was then acquired by a certain 
'AH ibn al-Faraj al-Zajhl, by whom she had a daughter. 
Divorced, she entered the household of a cadet of the 
family of Hamza ibn Malik, himself a good singer and a 
performer on the mi'zafa (? psaltery). Her cleverness 
as an instrumentalist was generally acknowledged. 
At a concert given in the presence of the most celebrated 
tunburist of his day, Masdud, the latter refused to play 
in front of " a mistress of the musical art " like 'Ubaida. 
Jahza al-Barmaki possessed her tunbur, and underneath 
the neck was written, " In love one can endure almost 

*Aghanl, xviii, 175-91. Nihayat al-arab, v, 92, where the name is 
vocalized as 'Arlb. 

K 



134 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

anything except faithlessness." The instrument had 
been given her by Ja'far ibn al-Ma'mun. 'Ubaida seems 
only to have been true to her art. 1 

Shariyya was a native of Al-Basra, her father belonging 
to the Banu Sama ibn Lu'ai, and her mother to the 
Banu Zuhra a branch of the Quraish. In spite of her 
origin, she was put up for the highest bidder by her 
mother, and was purchased by Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi. 
He had her taught by the best singing-girls in his house- 
hold, including the famous Raiq ( Bloom of Youth"), 
and he then made a present of her to his daughter, 
Maimuna. The prince afterwards freed her, and made her 
his wife. Al-Mu'tasim (833-42) was annoyed at this, but 
Ibrahim argued that she was one of the Quraish. On 
the death of Ibrahim she entered the harim of Al-Mu'tasim 
and remained at court under several khalifs. Muhammad 
ibn al-Harith, asked his opinion of the respective merits 
of Prince Ibrahim and Shariyya as musicians, awarded the 
palm to the latter. One of her best pupils was Farida. 2 

Badhl (" Gift ") was a songstress of Al-Medlna who 
flourished at the courts from Al-Amin (809-13) to Al- 
Mu'tasim (833-42). She belonged at first to Ja'far ibn 
al-Hadi, but Al-Amin, having heard her sing, begged his 
cousin to sell her to him. Ja'far replied, " Men of rank 
do not sell their slaves." Finally, however, Al-Amin 
obtained her. She was a most accomplished artiste, 
Fulaih ibn Abi'l-'Aura' having been one of her teachers. 
She had a prodigious memory and boasted of a repertory 
of 30,000 songs. So perfect was her knowledge of the 
songs that even Ishaq al-Mausili stood abashed. Abu 
Hashisha, the musical biographer, says that in the time 
of Al-Ma'mun (813-33) she composed a Kitdb al-agham 
(Book of Songs) of some 12,000 specimens for 'AH ibn 
Hisham. This resulted in a reward of 10,000 pieces of 
silver. She left a large fortune. 3 Among her pupils 
were Dananir and Mutayyim al-Hashimiyya 4 

*Aghdnl, xix, 134-7. Nihdyat al-arab, v, iii. Written 'Atoda by 
Guidi. 355, but cf. 500. 

Aghdnl, xiv, 109-14. Nihayat al-arab, v, 80. 

Aghdnl, xv, 144-7. Nihayat al-arab, v, 85. 
4 Aghdnl, vii, 31-8. xvi, 136. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 135 

Dananir (" Wealth "), surnamed al-Barmakiyya, was 
a slave of a man of Al-Medina, who sold her to Yahya 
ibn Khalid al-Barmaki, who set her free. She was well- 
educated and was a gifted poetess. Among her music 
teachers were Ibrahim al-Mausili, Ishaq al-Mausili, Ibn 
Jami', Fulaih, and Badhl. She sang before Harun 
(786-809) and was the authoress of a Kitdb mujarrad 
al-aghani (Book of Choice Songs). 1 She refused to 
marry the court musician 'Aqil, on the ground that 
she could not ally herself with a second-rate performer. 2 

'Atika bint Shuhda 3 was the daughter of Shuhda, the 
famous songstress at the court of Al-Walid II (743-44). 
Like her mother, she was an excellent singer, and Yahya 
ibn 'All, the musical theorist, said that she was one of 
the best of people in singing. At the court of Harun 
(786-809) she was a great favourite, and among her pupils 
were Ishaq al-Mausili and Mukhariq. 4 

Mutayyim (" Enslaving ") al-Hashimiyya 6 was a free- 
woman of Al-Basra, where she lived all her life. Taught 
by Ibrahim al-Mausili and his son Ishaq, and Badhl, she 
became a well-known singer and poetess. She was 
acquired by 'All ibn Hisham and became the mother of 
his children. Both Al-Ma'mun (813-33) and Al-Mu'tasim 
(833-42) had heard her sing. 6 

Qalam al-Salihiyya was a singing-girl of Salih ibn 
'Abd al-Wahhab. She was counted " a clever singer and 
performer," and was bought from this man by Al-Wathiq 
(842-7) for 10,000 pieces of gold. 7 

Dhat al-Khal (" Mistress of the Beauty Spot ") was 
originally purchased by Harun (786-809) for 70,000 pieces 
of silver, but was afterwards given to his favourite slave, 
Hammawaihi, in marriage. On her husband's death she 
re-entered the harim of Harun, and she was one of the 
three favourites that the poets sang about, the other two 
being Sihr ("Charm") and Diya' ("Splendour"). 8 

1 Aghanl, xvi, 136-9. Nihayat al-ardb, v, 90. 

8 Von Hammer and Fetis have 'Aqld. 

8 Kosegarten writes Shahda. Lib. Cant., 22. Aghanl, vi, 57-8. 

6 Kosegarten writes Hishamiyya. Lib. Cant. t 29. 

Aghdnl, vn, 31-8. Nihdyat al-arab, v, 62. 

7 Aghdnl, xii, 115-17. Nihayat al-arab, v, 68. 

Aghanl, xv, 79, 80. Nihayat al-arab, v, 88. 



136 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

'Inan was another singing-girl who captivated Haiun. 
She was formerly in the service of a certain Al-Natifi. 
One day when the khalif had heard one of her verses 
recited by a court minstrel, he approached her owner with 
a view to purchase. The price was 30,000 pieces of gold. 
Al-Asma'i said that Harun was never infatuated with 
anyone more than with 'Inan. 1 

Other singing-girls of passing note were : Hasana, 8 
Raiq, 3 Daman, 4 Wahba, 5 Dufaq, 6 Sam^a, 7 and 
Qumriyya. 8 

In Al-Andalus there were some famous songstresses. 
'Afza was the favourite singing-girl of 'Abd al-Rahman I 
(756-88). She was purchased in the Orient, and was con- 
sidered "the most excellent of people in music (ghind)." 9 

Facjl was originally in the service of a daughter of 
Harun at Baghdad, but later went to Al-Medma, and from 
there she journeyed with a companion ' Alam, to Al- 
Andalus, and became famous at the court of 'Abd al- 
Rahman II (822-52). We are told that she excelled in 
music (ghina). 10 

Qalam was a Biscayan songstress who was obtained by 
'Abd al-Rahman II. She is spoken of as a scholar, an 
excellent scribe, a historian of poetry, a reciter of stories, 
well versed in the various forms of polite literature, and 
" devoted to music (al-samd')." n 

Musabih was a singing-girl of Abu Haf 'Umar ibn 
Qalhil of Al-Andalus. In music she is said to have reached 
" the highest point of excellence and skill, together with 
sweetness of voice." Ibn 'Abd Rabbihi has a poem in her 
honour. She had Ziryab as a teacher. 12 

Mut'a was another of Ziryab's pupils, and when she 
grew up she so captivated the sultan, 'Abd al-Rahman II 
(822), that Ziryab presented her to him. 18 

1 Aghdnl, x, 101. xx, 76. 'Iqd al-farld, iii, 199. Nihayat al-arab t 
v, 75. Aghdnl, xii, 108. 

Aghanl, iii, 184. Rlq in Kosegarten, Lib. Cant., 29. 
4 Aghdnl, v, 58-9. Aghanl, xiii, 126. 

Aghanl, xi, 98-100. Nihayat al-arab, v. 67. In the latter as in 
Kosegarten and Von Hammer, she is called Duqaq. 

7 Aghdnl, iii, 115. Aghdnl, vi, 17. 

Al-Maqqarl, Analectes, ii, 97-8. Aghdnl, xx, 148, 149. 
10 Al-Maqqarl, Analectes, ii, 96. 

" Ibid, i, 225. "Al-Maqqarl, Analectes, ii, 90. "Ibid. 



CHAPTER VI 

THE 'ABBASIDS 
(The Decline, 847-945) 

" I like the man who cultivates poetry for self-instruction, not for 
lucre, and the man who practises music for pleasure, not for gain." 

Ibn Muqla (loth cent.). 1 

BY this time the Khalifate had begun to reveal signs of 
serious political decline. One of the causes of this decay 
was the rise of the Turkish soldiery, who played a part 
in the history of the Khalifate similar to that of the 
Praetorian guards in the Roman decline. They had been 
brought to Baghdad by Al-Ma'mun (813-33) so as to 
counterbalance the influence of the Khurasan! mercen- 
aries, 2 and by the time of Al-Mu'tasim (833-42) the entire 
standing army of the khalif comprised these soldiers, 
the Arabs, both officers and men, who had been displaced, 
having retired to their tribes, where they were to become 
" a chronic element of disturbance and revolt/' 3 The 
Turks, whose numbers were ever on the increase, soon 
became masters of the Khalifate, and from the accession 
of Al-Mu'tazz (862) to the coming of the Buwaihids 
(945) the very succession to the Khalifate was determined 
by these people. 4 There can be but little doubt that the 
domination of these mercenaries contributed seriously 
to the decline of the political Khalifate. 

Side by side with this military tyranny and political 
decadence, there was a revival of a bigoted orthodoxy 
in Islam that brought about a corresponding Intellectual 
and artistic retrogression, which played no small part 

1 Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., iii, 270. 
1 Muir, Caliphate, 511. 
Muir, op. cit. t 513. 
4 Muir, op. cit. t 531. 

137 



138 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

in the general decline. The first century of 'Abbasid 
rule, as Professor R. A. Nicholson points out, was marked 
by a great intellectual agitation. Rationalism and free- 
thought were " in the air," and these ideas had official 
support from the time of Al-Ma'mun (813-33). When 
Al-Mutawakkil (847-61) became khalif, orthodoxy was 
re-established, and all forms of heresy were suppressed 
with the utmost rigour and cruelty. 1 During the 
whole of this period practically, the Hanball sect domin- 
ated. A regular inquisition spilling wine and destroying 
forbidden musical instruments, to say nothing of execu- 
tions and imprisonments was in full swing. Whilst 
the Khalif ate was pampering " religious men without 
intelligence " as Abu'l-'Ala al-Ma'arri would say, and 
persecuting " intelligent men without religion," the 
finest civilization of the Middle Ages was slipping away. 

We have already seen that Al-Andalus in the West 
had claimed its own sultan, an Umayyad, since 755, 
and the disintegration of the Empire was to follow 
swiftly on this event, although not connected causally 
with it. First there came Idris, a great-grandson of 
Khalif 'All, who raised the Idrisids of Morocco (788-985) 
to independence. The rest of North Africa accepted 
this lead when the Aghlabids (800-909) set up their 
kingdom at Qairawan near Tunis, who, in turn, were 
succeeded by the Fatimids (909-972). In Egypt and 
Syria, the Tulunids (868-905) took control, and were 
succeeded (save for a brief interval when the khalif 
asserted his authority) by the Ikhshldids (935-969). 

In the East, matters were almost as bad, for the 
various provinces, Khurasan, Tabaristan, Persia, Trans- 
oxiana, and Jurjan, had become practically independent 
(making a mere nominal acknowledgment to the khalif) 
under the Tahirids (820-72), 'Alids (864-928), Saffarids 
(868-903), Samanids (874-999), and the Ziyarids (928-976) 
respectively. Nearer home, 'Uman had long since 
acknowledged its own imam. Al-Yaman claimed its 
own rulers in the Ziyadids (819-1018) of Zabid, and the 
Ya'furids (861-997) f San'a and Janad, whilst the 

1 Al-fabarl, iii, 1389, seq. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 139 

Hamdanids ruled in Mesopotamia (929-91) and Syria 
(944-1003). By the end of the period under consideration 
all that was left to the khalif, save nominal allegiance, 
was the capital, and even here, as Muir remarks, how 
little was the authority of the " Commander of the 
Faithful." Still, he was the spiritual head of this loosely- 
held empire, and Baghdad was the centre of Islamic 
culture in the East, although it was Cordova that counted 
in the West. 

1 

Al-Mutawakkil (847-61), the first khalif of the decline, 
opened his reign with an official return to orthodoxy, 
and Ahmad ibn Hanbal, the founder of the narrowest 
and least spiritual of the four orthodox sects, 1 became 
the chief theologian. There then began the terrors of 
an inquisition, details of which may be read in Al-Tabari 
and Ibn al-Athir. The philosopher and music theorist, 
Al-Kindi, had his library confiscated, whilst the renowned 
physician, Bukht-Yishu', was despoiled of his possessions 
and banished. It is not surprising therefore " how 
comparatively small is the number of writers and scholars 
of eminence who flourished in Al-Mutawakkil's time." 
Among the few writers on music were Al-Kindi and Ibn 
Khurdadhbih. The practice of music, however, was 
scarcely interfered with, for the khalif was a great lover 
of the art, and gave constant public encouragement to 
its professors. 2 His son, Abu 'Isa 'Abdallah, was an 
accomplished musician who composed some three hundred 
songs. 3 His wazir, Muhammad ibn Fadl al-Jarjara'i, 
was also " celebrated for his musical talents." 4 

The khalif built a gorgeous palace away from Samarra, 
now the official capital, which he called the Ja'fariyya, 
after himself. It was " crowded with every means of 
enjoyment, music, song, and gay divertissement." 5 
Here the khalif encouraged the virtuosi Ishaq al-Mausili, 
Ahmad ibn Yahya al-Makki, Muhammad ibn al-Harith, 

1 Browne, E. G., Literary History of Persia, i, 344. 

Al-Mas'udl, vi, 191. 

Aghdnl, ix, 104. 

Fakhrl, 413 

Muir, Caliphate, 528. Cf. Al-Mas'udl, vii, 192. 



140 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

'Amr ibn Bana, 'Abdallah ibn al-' Abbas al-Rabi% 
Ahmad ibn Sadaqa, 'Ath'ath al-Aswad, Al-Hasan al- 
Masdud, and Ibn al-Mariql, as well as the songstresses 
'Uraib, Shariyya, Farida, and his favourite Mahbuba. 
He was most generous to them all, 1 but, as Muir says, 
it " makes but sorry amends for a life of cruel tyranny, 
bigotry, and self-indulgence/' 2 

Al-Muntair (861-2) had but a short reign. He was 
both a poet and musician himself, and the words of his 
songs have been preserved in the great Kitab al-aghanl, 
where a chapter is devoted to him. 3 His favourite 
minstrel at court was Bunan ibn 'Amr [al-Harith], who 
sang his compositions. Another to whom he was partial 
was Al-Hasan al-Masdud. We read of his singing-girls 
in the Muruj al-dhahab of Al-Mas'udi. 4 

Al-Musta'm (862-66) has left no record of his musical 
tastes. One of his governors, however, Muhammad ibn 
'Abdallah ibn Tahir (d. 867), was a great patron of music. 
One day he was asked by Abu'K Abbas al-Makki, just 
before a concert, what he considered was the best music 
(samd'). He replied, " The best music is that of the four 
strings [the 'ud] when it accompanies a good song ren- 
dered by a perfect voice." 6 

Al-Mu'tazz (866-69) was a ^ so a musician and a poet, 
as we know from the great Kitab al-aghani which registers 
some of his songs. 6 Among his favourite minstrels were : 
Bunan ibn 'Amr [al-Harith] and Sulaiman ibn al-Qassar, 
the latter a fine tunburist. Shariyya and Jaha/i were his 
two special songstresses. His son 'Abdallah, a most 
accomplished musician, 7 took part in the musical dis- 
cussions at the court of Al-Wathiq. 8 This prince wrote 
a book on the songstress Shariyya, and a Kitab al-badf 
(Book of Poetics), the first treatise of its kind. 9 He was 
called to the throne in 908 on the death of Al-Muktafi, 
but was murdered the same day by the partisans of 
Al-Muqtadir. 

Al-Muhtadi (869-70) was a son of the artistic Al-Wathiq, 

1 Al-Mas'udI, vii, 276. Muir, op. cit., 530. 

Aghani, vm, 175-8. * Al-Mas'udI, vii, 297. 

Al-Mas'udf, vii, 347. Aghdnl, viii, 178. 

Aghani, ix, 140. Aghani, v, 97. Aghani, xiv, 109. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 141 

but he inherited neither his father's culture nor his 
toleration. He took the pious Umayyad khalif 'Umar II 
as his model, and the court was speedily transformed. 
First of all he placed an interdict on music. 1 " Singing- 
girls and musicians were expelled ; beasts in the menagerie 
slaughtered, and hounds turned adrift . . . wine and games 
proscribed; and a frugal household." 2 It mattered 
little, for he was murdered as were his four prede- 
cessors. 8 

Al-Mu'tamid (870-92), under the impulsion of his 
brother, Al-Muwaffaq, was the first of the khalifs of the 
decline to attempt to stem the tyranny of the Turkish 
faction. The removal of the court back to Baghdad 
helped to accomplish this to some extent. The khalif 
was a musician himself, and he brought the musicians 
and singing-girls back to the court now held in the 
Ma'muni palace, or as it was now called, the Hasani, 
so eloquently described by Yaqut. 4 This khalif, says 
Al-Mas'udi, was appassioned for musical instruments 
(malahi). Ibn Khurdadhbih, the geographer and writer 
on music, was favoured by him, and it is to his oration 
on music before this khalif that we owe some of our 
knowledge of the early musical history of the Arabs and 
Persians, 6 and to a songstress of his court for a description 
of the dances and dance rhythms of the period. 6 Among 
the newcomers to be favoured among the court virtuosi 
was Muhammad ibn Ahmad ibn Yahya al-Makki. 
Shariyya too was still in good graces at court. 7 It was 
Al-Mu'tamid who commanded that a collection of the 
songs of 'Uraib be made. 8 One of his own songs in the 
khafif thaqU rhythm, set to the words of Al-Farazdaq, 
is given in the great Kitab al-aghanl* 

Al-Mu'ta<Jid (892-902), although strictly orthodox and 
a bigot who interdicted philosophical works, favoured 
music and intellectual culture. When he was a prince 

1 Fakhrl, 427. Muir, Caliphate, 539. 

Al-Muntasir however, may have died a natural death. 

Yaqut, i, 806-9. 

Al-Mas'udi, viii, 88-89. See my Studies in Oriental Musical 
Instruments, chap. v. 

Al-Mas'udi, viii, 100. Aghanl, xiv, 113- 

Aghani, xviii, 176. Aghanl, viii, 186. 



142 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

he was noted for his marvellous voice. 1 He had 'Ubaidal- 
lah ibn 'Abdallah ibn Tahir as his " boon companion/' 
and this latter was the author of a Kitab fi'l-nagham 
(Book on the Notes). 2 He anathematized all who even 
mentioned the name of the Umayyads in ordinary public 
affairs, yet he would listen for hours to a song by the 
Umayyad khalif Al-Walid II, when sung by his favourite 
minstrel Ahmad ibn 'Abdallah ibn Abfl-'Ala'. 3 At the 
same time, he had the philosopher and music theorist 
Al-SarakhsI put to death for a political offence. 4 Al- 
Mu'tatfid held splendid courts at the Firdaus and 
Thurayya palaces, which had been built by him. 

Al-Muktafi (902-08) was a son of the preceding. We 
know nothing of his musical preferences save that 
'Ubaidallah ibn 'Abdallah ibn Tahir still continued to be 
one of the " boon companions/' 5 an honour shared with 
another music theorist Yahya ibn 'All ibn Yahya 
ibn Abl Manur. The Baghdad hospital at this time was 
under the direction of the famous Abu Bakr Muhammad 
ibn Zakariyya al-Razi (Rhazes) who was also a music 
theorist. Under this khalif the Empire became more 
secure than it had been for many years. 

Al-Muqtadir (908-32) was but " a weak voluptuary 
in the hands of women of the court and their favourites." 6 
Baghdad was still in the control of the Turkish soldiery 
who held the khalif at their mercy, whilst the orthodox 
party terrorized all and sundry who disagreed with their 
opinions. 7 Yet the khalif maintained brilliant and pomp- 
ous courts at his new palaces, the Shajara and Muhdith, 
and possessed no fewer than 11,000 eunuchs. 8 Spending 
his days and nights with musicians and singing-girls, 9 
he made no attempt to check the excesses of the lawless 
soldiery or the intolerant theologians, with the result 
that he left a legacy of anarchy to his successors. 
Miskawaihi says that he " avoided male companions 
even minstrels." 10 On the other hand, several male 

1 Aghanl, viii, 196. Aghanl, viii, 44, 45. 

* Aghanl, viii, 88. Al-Mas'udi, viii, 179. 

* Aghanl, viii, 54. Muir, Caliphate, 565. 
' Muir, Caliphate, 567-8. Fakhri, 449. 

* Muir, op.cit., 566. The Eclipse of the 'Abbasid Caliphate, i, 13. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 143 

minstrels are mentioned at his court in the great Kitdb 
al-aghdm, and among them Jahza al-Barmaki, Ibrahim 
ibn Abi'l-'Ubais, Ibrahim ibn al-Qasim ibn Zurzur, 
Wasif al-Zamir, and Kaniz. 1 One of his favourite 
singing-girls was Salifa. 

Al-Qahir (932), Al-Radi (934), Al-Muttaqi (940), and 
Al-Mustakfi (944-46) were the next khalifs. Little need 
be said of them. Mere puppets in the hands of the 
Turkish soldiery, worse even than their predecessors, 
they wielded little or no authority. Their elevation 
to the thone depended upon the whims of the mercen- 
aries. Three of these khalifs were deposed by them and 
blinded. Al-Radi, the only one who died as khalif, 
is generally spoken of as " the last of the real khalifs," 
i.e., the last to deliver the Friday orations, and to con- 
duct the affairs of state like the khalifs of old. He was 
also the last khalif whose poetry has been preserved. 2 

Yet in spite of these trials and tribulations, music 
still flourished at the courts. 3 Al-Qahir made a show of 
" orthodoxy/' and forbade wine, male musicians, song- 
stresses and mukhannathun. These individuals were 
arrested and sent to Al-Basra and Al-Kufa. At the 
same time, Al-Qahir himself indulged in music, and had 
as many songstresses as he liked. 4 

So far the state of music at the Baghdad court, the hub 
of the Eastern world. Yet we cannot ignore the in- 
fluence of the many independent dynasties, " whose 
courts often became foci for learning and literature 
[and music], more apt in many ways to discover and 
stimulate local talent than a distant and unsympathetic 
metropolis. " 6 It was the Samanids of Transoxiana 
who protected the scientist and music theorist Muhammad 
ibn Zakariyya al-Razi (Rhazes), and later fostered Ibn 
Sma, as well as the minstrel Rudaki, who is sometimes 
claimed as the first Persian poet. In Syria, the Ham- 
danids patronized the philosopher and music theorist 

1 Aghanl, v, 22. 

* Fakhrl, 484. Muir, op. cit. t 571. 

Aghanl , xv, 99. 

* The Eclipse of the 'Abbasid Caliphate, i, 269. 

Browne, Lit. Hist, of Persia, i, 339-40. 



144 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

Al-Farabi, and in their dominions there flourished the 
music historians Al-Isfaham and Al-Mas'udi. In Egypt 
the Tulunids were the first under the Arab domination 
to make the land famed for its art, and the court for its 
wealth and splendour. Khumarawaih married his 
daughter to the Khalif Al-Mu'tamid, and spent one 
million pieces of gold on the event. He had such an 
inordinate appreciation for music and singers that his 
palace was adorned with portraits of his songstresses, 
in spite of the ban of Islam against portraiture. 1 The 
Ikhshldids who succeeded the Tulunids were equally 
favourable to music and belles lettres (witness Al- 
Mutanabbi). If the court of the regent (ustdd) Abul- 
Misk Kafur was resplendent for its music and musicians 
so were the fetes of the people. Al-Mas'udi who visited 
Al-Fustat in 942, describes a. fete in which he heard music 
on all sides, with singing and dancing. 2 

More important still perhaps was the culture influence 
of Al-Andalus in the West. Here, rulers were equally 
anxious to patronize music, literature and science. 
During the reigns of Muhammad I (852-86), Al-Mundhir 
(886-88), and 'Abdallah (888-912), we see the arts flour- 
ishing, and science in the ascendant. 3 The last named 
khalif was, however, prejudiced against music. 

" The learned of Al-Andalus," says Sa'id ibn Ahmad 
(d. 1069), " exerted themselves in the cultivation of science 
and laboured in it with assiduity, giving evident proofs 
of their acquisitions in all manner of learning." 4 In the 
science of music, the first-fruit of this was Ibn Firnas 
(d. 888).' 

At the same time, independent dynasties had sprung 
up in Al-Andalus as in the East. These petty rulers, 
who gave mere nominal allegiance to the sultan at 
Cordova, vied with each other not only for temporal, 
but for artistic and cultural superiority. The amir 

l Al-Maqr!zI, Al-Mawa'i$ (Bulaq edit.), 316, 317. S. Lane-Poole, 
A Hist, of Egypt in the Middle Ages, 74. 
Al-Mas'udi, Prairies d'or, ii, 364-5. 

Casiri, ii, 34, 

Al-Maqqarl, Moh. Dyn. t i, 140, and Appendix xl. 

Afcmad Zakl B&sha, L' Aviation chez les Musulmans (Cairo, 1912). 



THE 'ABBASIDS 145 

of Cazlona, 'Ubaidallah ibn Umayya, was distinguished 
for his patronage of minstrelsy and the arts in general, 
whilst Ibrahim ibn al-Hajjaj (d. 900), who ruled at 
Seville, was the envy of the land on account of his poets 
and musicians. He brought scholars from Arabia and 
singing-girls from Baghdad, including the famous Qamar. 1 
The next sultan of Cordova, 'Abd al-Rahman III 
(912-61), put an end to the independence of the petty 
chiefs. His reign is cited as the most illustrious in the 
history of Al-Andalus, 2 and he was the first of its rulers 
to adopt the title of khalif. "Except perhaps Byzan- 
tium," says Stanley Lane-Poole, " no city in Europe 
could compare with Cordova in the beauty of her build- 
ings, the luxury and refinement of her life, and the learning 
and accomplishments of her inhabitants." 3 The famous 
Ibn 'Abd Rabbihi, the author of the 'Iqd al-farid, which 
has been freely drawn upon in these pages, was court 
poet to this sultan. 

n 

We now come to a period when alien influences reveal 
themselves more clearly in Arabian music. Ever since 
the accession of the 'Abbasids (750), the influx of Persian 
notions, especially those of Khurasan, persisted in general 
culture. The rise of the Samanids further east, exercised 
additional weight in the balance in favour of Iranian 
art. From the opening of the " Decline " (847) Turkish 
ideas found slight acceptance in Al-'Iraq, and with the 
supremacy of the Tulunids (867) these were extended to 
Egypt. Equally important perhaps was the impression 
created by the great strides made in the translation of 
the ancient Greek writers on music. How far all this 
flux was to change the course of Arabian music we shall 
see. Yet we must remember that if the Arabs borrowed 
from the Persians, the Persians too owed a weightier 
debt to the Arabs, not only for Islam, but for their sciences, 
philosophy, and belles lettres. As Noeldeke says, " Hellen- 
ism never touched more than the surface of Persian life, 

1 Al-Maqqarl, Analectes, ii, 97. 

1 Dozy, Hist, des musul., iii, 90. 

1 Lane-Poole, The Moors in Spain, 129, 139. 



146 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

but Iran was penetrated to the core by Arabian religion 
and Arabian ways." 1 

During the opening of this period, science and philo- 
sophy were proscribed. Scientists were punished, 
libraries of suspected individuals were seized and even 
destroyed, and booksellers were forbidden to sell anything 
but orthodox literature. Precisely the same plague of 
intolerance swept over Al-Andalus, and although it 
raged here for a shorter spell, the damage to be assessed 
in the actual destruction of books is probably greater 
in the latter case. The practice, and perhaps the science 
of music, alone escaped the fury of the orthodox re- 
action, and only one of the khalifs had either the 
courage or inclination to hurl anathema at it, and that 
was Al-Muhtadi. The theologians, it would appear, 
dared not interfere with the pleasures of the court and 
the Turkish officers. It would have been almost as futile 
as asking them not to breathe as to suggest that they 
should not indulge in music. However, the tendency 
of the age is well expressed in the literature of Abu Bakr 
ibn 'Abdallah ibn Abi'l-Dunya (823-94), the tutor of 
Al-Muktafi. In his Dhamm al-malahl (Disapprobation 
of Musical Instruments), which is a diatribe against 
music, he argues in effect that all dissipation begins with 
music and ends in drunkenness. 2 Soon indeed a veritable 
school arose who put forth quite a library of literature 
on this question as to whether al-samd* or " listening to 
music " was lawful or not. On the whole most of their 
threatenings went for naught, for, indeed, there was a 
far more interesting debate in progress. 

In the days of Harun (786-809) the court musicians 
were divided into two hostile camps, led by Ibrahim 
al-Mausili and Ibn Jami' respectively. On the death 
of these virtuosi, we find Ishaq al-Mausill and Prince 
Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi, leading rival cliques at court. 
Both of these movements had their origin in the jealousy 
aroused by the unique position held by the Mausili 
family at court. In the second case, however, it developed 

* Quoted by Browne, Literary History of Persia, i, 6. 
1 Berlin MS., 5504. Cf. Hajj! Khalifa, No. 5824. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 147 

into an epic struggle between a classic and romantic 
school in music. Prince Ibrahim was the son and the 
brother of a khalif , and, indeed, had been an anti-khalif 
himself for a time. He was a spoilt child, petted and 
pampered by all he came in contact with, and so became 
a consummate egotist. The author of the great Kitab 
al-aghani tells us that in spite of his natural gifts and 
eminent merits, Prince Ibrahim would not conform to 
the proper interpretation of the ancient music, but would 
suppress notes and alter passages just as he thought fit, 
and would answer when reproved, " I am a king, and the 
son of a king ; I sing just as the whim of my fancy takes 
me." He was the first musician who introduced licences 
into the ancient song. The result of this independent 
attitude was that a crowd of dilettanti, ever enthusiastic 
for novelties, as well as a considerable number of the 
virtuosi, set out to defy all classical traditions. The 
struggle between the Classicists and Romanticists was 
waged with considerable vigour on both sides, and whilst 
Ishaq al-Mausili lived the victory remained with him, 
but after that, the principles of the new school gained 
the day. 

Apparently the new art tendencies suited the general 
social and political drift of the period. At the same time, 
it is not easy to discern clearly what the precise inno- 
vations were that the Romanticists were concerned with. 
It is clear from the great Kitab al-aghdni that an alteration 
took place in the rhythmic modes (tqd'dt). Ishaq 
al-Mausili had carefully classified these, but Prince 
Ibrahim challenged him in this respect, 1 and there are 
some interesting discussions on the subject, some of 
which have been preserved. The author of the great 
Kitab al-aghdni himself contributed a treatise to this 
question, which, unfortunately, has not come down to 
us. 

More serious still was the interference with the old 
melodic modes. This may have been due to the intro- 



1 Ishaq could trace his traditions back through pupil to master up 
to the days of the jdhiliyya thus, Ishaq al-Mausili, Siyyat, Burdan, 
'Azza al-Maila', and Ra'iqa, 



148 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

duction of the Khurasan! scale of two limmas and a comma, 
as exhibited in the tunbur al-khurdsani. Possibly, this 
was the innovation in the scale from Persia which is 
mentioned in the early ninth century. 1 The author of 
the 'Iqd al-farid says : 

"Mukhariq (d. 845) and 'Alluyah altered the old 
[music], all of it, and had introduced Persian notes 
[or modes] (naghamdt) into it. And when the Hijazian 
came to them with the thaqil awwal he said, ' Your 
singing requires bleeding ' (i.e., it is too full of notes)." 2 

According to the author of the great Kitab al-aghdm, 
Ishaq al-Mausili considered it a crime that the old 
music should be rendered other than as it had been 
traditionally handed down. The other school, led by 
Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi and his followers, such as Mukhariq, 
Shariyya, Raiq, and others, subjected the old music to 
their caprices. Our author was anxious to pillory the 
Romanticists for all time, and so he names those respon- 
sible for the alteration of the old Arabian traditional 
music as follows. Among the foremost, he says, of those 
who corrupted the old music were : the family of Hamdun 
ibn Isma/il and his teacher, Mukhariq, the pupils of 
Zaryat (sic) a songstress of Al-Wathiq, and the female 
slaves of Shariyya and Raiq (written Ziq). He then 
gives the names of the Classicists who followed Ishaq 
al-Mausili, and they were : 'Uraib and her circle of sing- 
ing-girls, Al-Qasim ibn Zurzur and his family, the circle 
of Badhl the songstress, the minstrels of the Barmakid 
family, and the progeny of Hashim, Yahya ibn Mu'ad, 
and Al-Rabr [ibn Yunus]. 3 

Jahza al-Barmaki, who died in 938, said that in his 
day, so great had been the tampering with the old music 
that it was impossible to hear one of the old songs exe- 
cuted as it had been composed. 4 At the same time, 

1 It is still possible however that the KhurasanI scale is later, and that 
the innovation mentioned concerns merely the Persian " middle 
finger " note (wusta al-fars) which had been adopted on the 'ud being 
placed between the Pythagorean and Zalzalian third. 

1 'Iqd al-farid, iii, 190. Al-Wathiq employed songstresses from 
Khurasan whose melodies were called fahlldhiyydt. They received this 
name after the famous Persian minstrel called Fahlldh (Barbad). 

1 Aghdnl, ix, 35. 'The author of the Aghdnl says the same (ix. 35). 



THE 'ABBASIDS 149 

both Yahya ibn 'All ibn Yahya ibn Abi Mansur (d. 912) 
and the author of the great Kitdb al-aghdni (d. 967) 
insist that even in their day the theoretical system of 
Ishaq still obtained. The latter says : " All that we have 
mentioned of the genres (ajnds) of the songs follows the 
theory of Ishaq al-Mausili . . . seeing that his method is that 
which is accepted to-day, and not that of those who op- 
posed him like [Prince] Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi, Mukhariq, 
'Alluyah, 'Amr ibn Bana, Muhammad ibn al-Harith 
ibn Buskhunr and those who agree with them . . . 
for what they say is now rejected and left behind, and 
people only recognize what Ishaq taught/' 1 

At the same time, interest in the new ideas did not 
flag, since we have 'All ibn Harun ibn 'AH ibn Yahya 
ibn Abi Mansur (d. 963), a nephew of Yahya ibn 'All 
ibn Yahya ibn Abi Mansur, a great protagonist of the 
theories of Ishaq, writing a book on this subject entitled, 
Kitdb risdla fi'l-farq bain Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi wa Ishaq 
al-Mausill fi'l-ghind* (Treatise on the Difference between 
Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi and Ishaq al-Mausili concerning 
Music). 2 

If the Romantic movement was responsible for the loss 
of much of the older music of Arabia, it can claim to its 
credit the introduction of some new ideas from Persia 
which were to lend additional colour to the music of the 
Semites, an influence which remains to this very day. 
Most noticeable were the new modal ideas, due as much to 
a novel scale that had been introduced as to anything else. 
The Persian scale did not supersede the Arabian and 
Pythagorean systems but found acceptance side by side 
with them. East of the Tigris and Euphrates the scale 
of the tunbur al-khurdsdni already adverted to was 
favoured. 

It is rather unfortunate that we get no information 
from either Al-Kindl or Al-Farabi on the construction of 
the melodic modes, although they both describe the 
rhythmic modes fully. We know from the great Kitdb al- 
aghdni* and the Risdla fi'l-musiqi (or Kitdb al-nagham) 

1 Aghanl, i, 2. Fihrist, i, 144. 

Aghanl, viii, 24-5. 



I5o A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

of Yahya ibn 'AH ibn Yahya ibn Abi Mansur (d. 9I2) 1 
that modes of nine and ten notes had recently been 
introduced, the latter by 'Ubaidallah ibn 'Abdallah ibn 
Tahir (d. 912) it would seem. In view of this we need 
not necessarily attribute the nine note modes that we 
find very popular later, such as that known as Isfahan, 
to alien influence. Of course, the melodic modes were of 
secondary importance to the rhythmic modes in these 
days, and this attitude continued until the late tenth or 
early eleventh century, when Persian and Khurasan! 
ideas made a breach in Arabian musical art. 2 The 
same thing might be shown in Arabic poetry. Metre 
(arud) was of more count than rhyme (qdfiya). Although 
rhyme is a necessity to Arabic poetry, yet the peculiarity 
of the latter is that, with the exception of the muzdawaj, 
the same rhyme is continued throughout the poem. 

I have remarked that the influence of the Greek 
theorists in music did not make any definite headway 
until the " Golden Age " had passed, 3 and therefore 
although the treatises of Al-Kindi (d. 874) were written 
during the latter period, impressions only showed them- 
selves during " The Decline/' Whether Al-Kindi de- 
rived his theories of Greek music from Greek originals or 
from Arabic translations is a question for future dis- 
cussion. One or two passages point to a Syriac version 
or an Arabic version via Syriac. 4 On the other hand his 
terminology is quite different from that of Al-Farabi, 
Ibn Sina, and later writers, and from this it may be 
assumed that the treatises which he consulted on Greek 
theory were not the same as those consulted by the other 
writers mentioned. 5 Many of Al-Kindi's opinions on 
the physical and physiological aspects of sound may, 
indeed, be quite original, notwithstanding the fact that 
Arabic translations of such works as Aristotle's De anima, 

1 British Museum MS., Or. 2361, fol. 238-238 v. 
1 The rhythmic modes hold the field in the Ikhwan al-Safa', but by 
the time of the Ibn Sina there are signs of change. 

See ante p. 105. 

4 For instance he writes qlthura and not qlthdra. Berlin MS., 
Ahlwardt, 5531, fol. 24. But cf. Berlin MS., Ahlwardt, 5503, fol. 35 v. 

On the question of Al-Kind! and his knowledge of Greek see 
Leclerc, Histoire de la medecine arabe, i, 134 et seq. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 151 

Historia animalium, and the Problemata, as well as Galen's 
De voce t made by Hunain ibn Ishaq (d. 873), were pro- 
bably known to him. 

Although the Arabs had long been acquainted with 
ratios in the fretting of their stringed instruments, and 
probably the Kitdb al-nagham of Al-Khalil (d. 791) dealt 
with them, 1 the teaching of Al-Kindi on this subject 
must have been of considerable importance. Indeed, 
there can be little doubt that the Ikhwan al-Safa/ bor- 
rowed from this writer. This is not the place to discuss 
his Greek theories. Suffice it to say that he deals with 
sound (saut), intervals (ab'dd), genres (ajnas), systems 
(jumu') and species (anwd'), modes (luhuri), tones 
(taninat), mutation (intiqdl), and composition (ta'lif), 
following the Greeks. As previously remarked, however, 
Al-Kindi's account of the practical art, as known to the 
Arabs, is of highest interest and value in the history of the 
theory of Arabian music. 

Al-Kindi is also helpful as evidence that the Arabian 
system of music was not merely Persian or Byzantine 
methods as some writers have assumed. Here is one 
extract : " The teaching [of the art of music] is of many 
sorts (funun), that is to say, Arabian, Persian, Byzantine 
(Ruim), etc." 2 Another reads : " To every nation in 
regard to this instrument [the lute] is a method which 
no other people have. And their difference in that 
respect is like their difference in other things. Do you not 
see between the Arabs, the Byzantines, the Persians, 
the Khazar* the Abyssinians, and other people, the great- 
est difference in their natures, intellects, opinions, and 
customs ? " He then goes on to mention the difference 
in the musical art between the celebrated modes (turaq) 
of the Persians, the eight modes (alhdn thamdniyya= 
'OKTwrjxos) of the Byzantine theorists (astukhusiyya) , 
and the eight rhythmic modes (usul) of the Arabs, in 
each of which these nations specialized respectively. 4 

1 The pioneer mathematicians of the Arabs, Abu Ishaq al-Fazarl, 
Al-Nubasht, and Jabir ibn Hayyan were all dead by 777.' 
a Berlin MS, Ahlwardt, 5530, fol. 30. 
8 See Encyclopedia of Islam, ii, 935. 
Berlin MS., Ahlwardt, 5530, fol. 30. 



152 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

What helped to counteract Persian influence was the 
ascendancy of the Greek scholiasts. We have already 
seen that the scholars of the Bait al-hikma, the College 
of Science at Baghdad, had been busy with the treatises 
of the Greeks on music which had been translated into 
Arabic. Among the Greek musical theorists who had 
been translated were Aristoxenos, Euklid, Ptolemy 
and Nikomachos. Aristoxenos was known by two 
books, the Kitdb al-rlmus [? ru'us] (Book of Principles 
= a/>x a O and the Kitdb al-iqd* (Book of Rhythm 
= pvOpos). 1 In addition to his Problemata, Euklid 
(Pseudo-Euklid) was studied in two other musical works, 
a Kitdb al-nagham (Book of Notes = EtVaywy^ 
ap/zoi'ifcrj ?) and a Kitdb al-qdnun (Book of the 
Canon = Karon-op) /cavovos ?). 2 Ibn al-Haitham (d. 1038} 
wrote a " commentary " on Euklid's contribution to the 
science of music, and Ibn Sina may have made a similar 
contribution. 3 Nikomachos appeared in Arabic script in a 
Kitdb al-musiqi al-kabw (Opus Major on Music) and in 
several compendia (mukhtasar =yx t / n ' 8tm ')- 4 Ptolemy 
is also mentioned as the author of a Kitdb al-musiqi (Book 
of Music = 'A/o/zcw/o;). 5 Even a treatise on music 
by Pythagoras is recorded by the Arabic bibliographers. 6 

When these writings of the Greeks made their appear- 
ance in Arabic, music became one of the courses of 
scientific study and part of the 'ulum riyddiyya or 
mathematical arts. Al-Kindi (d. ca. 874), Al-SarakhsI 
(d. 899), the Banu Musa (tenth century), Thabit ibn 
Qurra (d. 901), Muhammad ibn Zakariyya al-Razi 
(d. 923), Qusta ibn Luqa (d. 932), and Al-Farabi (d. 950) 
were writers after the Greek school. What the Arabs 
borrowed directly may be traced in technical nomen- 
clature. The Arabic word ghind' had stood for both 
" song " in particular and " music " in general. It now 
came to be applied to the practical art, whilst the theo- 
retical art was represented by the word musiqi or miisiqd 

1 Fihrist, i, 270. Fihrist, i, 266. Ibn al-Qiftf, 65. 

1 Casiri, i, 416. Ibn Abl Uaibi'a, ii, 98. Cf. below, p. 218. 

4 Fihrist, i, 269. 

'Iqd al-farld, iii, 186. Kitdb al-tanblh, 128. 

Wenrich, De auct. graec., 88. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 153 

/). The names of a few musical instruments 
appeared in Arabic such as the qltdra (/u0a/>a) and 
qdnun (KO.VW). More permanent were some of the 
names introduced into the " theory." The interval 
was called the bu'd, and each specific interval was also 
given a name. The quarter-tone was the irkhd', the 
semitones were the baqiyya (Aet/^a) and infisdl 
a7roTo/jt^), the whole-tone was the tanin (roVos), 
etc. The Greek devices of genres (y^) and species 
(eiSfj) were adopted as the ajnas and anwff respec- 
tively. 1 

Following the example laid down in the Umayyad 
period and the " Golden Age " by Yunus al-Katib, 
Yahya al-Makki, Ishaq al-Mausili, and others, both 
virtuosi and dilettanti became quite diligent in the study 
of the history of music and the lives of its professors. 
Al-Mas'udi (d. ca. 957) says that he found an abundance 
of literature dealing with music (al-sama'), its history 
among the Arabs and other nations, as well as biographies 
of celebrated musicians both ancient and modern. 2 
Al-Isfahani (d. 967) compiled his famous Kitdb al- 
aghdni (Book of Songs), which, in spite of its title, is 
practically a history of Arabian music and poetry from 
the days of Idolatry to the tenth century. Biographers 
of musicians abound, and among them Qurais al-Jarrahi, 
Jahza al-Barmaki, Abu Hashisha, Al-Hasan al-Nasibi, 
and Al-Madmi. 

From the Kitdb al-aghdni we are able to appreciate 
the type of vocal music that was current. We not only 
have the lighter qit'a, which was more in keeping with 
the tastes of the period, but also the more serious pieces 
from the qa$d'id. It was apparently about this time that 
the musical performance called the nauba became known. 
In the Kitdb al-aghdni we read in several places of a com- 
pany of musicians being called a nauba* The name 
probably originated from the circumstance that the per- 
formance of these musicians was given at certain specified 

1 See my Facts for the Arabian Musical Influence, chap. iv. 

* Al-Mas'udi, viii, 103. 

*Aghanl,iii t 184-5 ; v, 167 ; vi, 76 ; xxi, 233. 



154 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

periods of the day, or that these musicians took turns in 
performance. In the course of time, however, the word 
was transferred from the performers to the performance, 
and we find the periodic playing of the khalif s military 
band at the five hours of prayer being called the nauba. 

The military band had now become one of the most 
important emblems (mardtib) of the sovereignty of the 
khalif. In the early days, as Ibn Khaldun points out, 
the shrill trump (bug) and spirit-stirring drum (tabl) 
were unknown to the Islamic armies. 1 It was the duff 
(square tambourine) and mizmdr (reed-pipe) that sufficed 
in these days. 2 But when the stern Muslims of Al-Hijaz 
came in contact with the Arabs of Al-HIra and Ghassan, 
the pomp and circumstance of war became the order of 
the day, and we find bands with the surndy (reed-pipe) 
and tabl* and then with the bug al-nafw (large metal 
trumpet), the dabddb (kettledrum), the qas'a (shallow 
kettledrum), 4 as well as the sunuj (cymbals). 

Instrumental music in general was considerably de- 
veloped during this period, and the careful descriptions 
of musical instruments in the Kitab al-mu$iqi of Al- 
Farabi are extremely valuable. 5 The 'ud (lute) was 
still " the most generally used " instrument, and was 
still strung with four strings in the East, although in 
Al-Andalus it possessed five ; that innovation having 
been introduced in the ninth century. A fifth string is 
certainly postulated by Al-Farabi, but seemingly only 
as a theoretical makeshift, just as Al-Kindi had done 
in the previous century. An arch-lute or zither called 
the shdhrud was invented by a certain Hakim ibn Ahwas 
al-Sughdi. 6 It had a compass of three octaves. 

The tunbur (pandore) became a special favourite with 

1 Ibn Khaldun, Prol. t ii, 44. The buq was not a warlike instrument 
with the Arabs when Al-Laith ibn Nasr (8th cent.) wrote, and in the 
following century Al Asma'I only knows of it as a martial instrument of 
the Christians. Lane, Lexicon, s v. 

Aghanl, ii, 175. Cf. Evliya Chelebl, i, ii, 226. 
1 Aghanl, xvi, 139. 

Fakhrl, p. 30. 

Casiri says that the Madrid MS. of Al-Farabi contains upwards of 
30 designs of musical instruments. The statement has been often 
repeated, but it is erroneous. 

See my Studies in Oriental Musical Instruments, p. 7. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 155 

the virtuosi, contesting the supremacy of the *ud as the 
instrument par excellence for the accompaniment. 1 Ibn 
Khurdadhbih assures us that it was common to Persia, 
Al-Raiy, Tabaristan, and Al-Dailam. 2 The peculiar timbre 
of the instrument, due to the drum-like structure of the 
sound-chest (it was probably constructed with a skin 
belly at this time) gave it a noisy tone, and was therefore 
more acceptable for solo performance. Two kinds of 
tunbur are described at length by Al-Farabi, the old 
Pagan tunbur al-mizdni, now called the tunbur al-baghdadi, 
and the tunbur al-khurasani fretted with a scale of two 
limmas and a comma. At this time both these instru- 
ments were to be found in Syria, but Al-Farabi says that 
the former was more common to the people of Baghdad 
and the lands to the West and Centre, whilst the latter 
instrument belonged especially to Khurasan and the 
countries east and north of it. 3 

Harps and psalteries like the jank (sanj), the salbdq 
(== o-a/A/^t^), 4 the mi'zafa (?), and the qdnun, which 
had been improved by Al-Farabi, 5 were in general use. 
For the first time we have positive proof of a stringed 
instrument being played with a bow. 6 The older lutes 
of the mizhar and kirdn type are also mentioned during 
the period. 

Among wind instruments, the nay, the surydnai, the 
mizmdr, and the diydnai or mizmdr al-muthannd, re- 
presented the wood-wind, whilst the buq or clarion be- 
longed to martial music together with drums (tubul, 
sing, tabl) of various types, and perhaps the cymbals 
(plur. sunuj, sing. sinj). Both the pneumatic organ and 
the hydraulis were also known to the Arabs of these 
days. 7 Nearly all these instruments are mentioned by 
Al-Mas'udi on the authority of Ibn Khurdadhbih (d.c. 
912), 8 and carefully described by Al-Farabi. 9 

1 Aghani, viii, 184-5. Al-Mas'udi, viii, 91. 

* Kosegarten, Lib. Cant., 89 et seq. Land, Recherches, 107-121. 

4 See my article " Byzantine Musical Instruments in the Ninth 
Century," in the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, April, 1925, 
p. 301, et seq. Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., iii, 309. 

6 Kosegarten, Lib. Cant. t 77, line 4. 

7 See my Organ of the Ancients : From Eastern Sources. 

8 See my Studies in Oriental Musical Instruments, p. 53 et. seq. 

* Kosegarten, Lib. Cant., 76-115. Land, Recherches, 100-68. 



156 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

The period of the Decline, in spite of the political 
decadence, the internecine strife, and the infirmity of the 
court at Baghdad, was almost as glorious an era for music 
as the " Golden Age." It was said of Al-Mutawakkal 
(847-61), who opened this epoch, that music and the 
dance reached a higher degree of excellence than before. 
The eloquent oration of Ibn Khurdadhbih on music at the 
throne of Al-Mu'tamid (870-92) amply discloses the 
ideals of the age. " Music (ghind')," he says, " sharpens 
the intellect, softens the disposition, and agitates the 
soul. It gives cheer and courage to the heart, and high- 
mindedness to the debased. With wine (nabidh) it 
creates freshness and vivacity against the grief and care 
which afflict the body. It is to be preferred to speech, 
as health would be to sickness. . . . May the peace of 
Allah fall on the sage who discovered this art, and on the 
philosopher who improved it. What a mystery he 
unveiled ! What a secret he revealed/' 1 

Similarly in Al-Andalus of the West we find the court 
poet Ibn 'Abd Rabbihi (d. 940) singing the praises of 
music. He calls it " the ' foraging ground ' of hearing, 
the pasturage of the soul, the spring-grass of the heart, 
the arena of love, the comfort of the dejected, the com- 
panionship of the lonely, and the provision of the traveller. 
. . . Oftentimes, man only appreciates the blessings of 
this world and the next through beautiful music (alhdn), 
for it induces to generosity of character in the performance 
of kindness, and of observing the ties of kinship, and the 
defending of one's honour, and the overcoming of faults. 
Oftentimes man will weep over his sins through [the 
influence of] music, and the heart will be softened from 
its stubbornness, and man may picture the Kingdom of 
Heaven and perceive its joys through the medium of 
beautiful music." 2 

111 

The virtuosi still thronged the courts, even though there 
were no outstanding figures as of old. Among the per- 

1 Al-Mas'udI, viii, 88. 'Iqd al-farld, iii, 170. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 157 

formers, whether vocal or instrumental, there were no 
names that could be matched with a Ma'bad, Ibn 'A'isha, 
Ibn Suraij, or Malik of the Umayyad days, nor with an 
Ibrahim al-Mausili, Ishaq al-Mausili, Prince Ibrahim, 
or Ibn Jami' of the " Golden Age. 11 Fresh conditions 
obtained. Something more than the talents of a virtuoso 
were demanded. To make headway at court and else- 
where, a minstrel had to possess other than executive 
musical accomplishments alone, and it will be observed 
that among the performers who will now be mentioned 
there were a goodly few who rose to celebrity because 
of their ability as poets, authors, story-tellers, chess 
players, and as agreeable " boon companions." 

'Amr ibn Bana 1 (d. 891), whose full name was 'Amr 
ibn Muhammad ibn Sulaiman ibn Rashid, was a freeman 
of Yusuf ibn 'Umar al-Thaqafi. His father was in charge 
of one of the government offices and was a distinguished 
scribe, whilst his mother, from whom he took the name of 
Bana, was a daughter of Rauh the secretary of Salama 
al-Wasif. 'Amr was a pupil of Ishaq al-Mausili and 
Prince Ibrahim, and he made his first public appearance 
at the court of Al-Ma'mun (813-33). In the days of 
Al-Mu'tasim (833-42) he was quite prominent, and on 
the accession of Al-Mutawakkil (847) he became the 
khalif s " boon companion." With Prince Ibrahim he 
was a great favourite, and one of his most reliable 
supporters in the Romantic movement. We are told, 
however, that although he was " an excellent singer 
and a good poet," he was, at bottom, but a mediocre 
musician. On one occasion, at a musical festival given 
by 'Abdallah ibn Tahir, he carried off the prize, a circum- 
stance due, we are informed, to the importunacy of Prince 
Ibrahim, who was particularly solicitous that his protege 
should have this honour. He was not an instrumentalist, 
and was quite ignorant of the art of accompaniment. 
His fame seems to have rested mainly on his Kitdb 
mujarrad al-aghdni (Book of Choice Songs), which, says 
Ibn Khallikan, was " a sufficient proof of his abilities." 
On the other hand, the author of the great Kitdb al- 

Cf . index of the Nihayat al-arab. 



158 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

aghdni in comparing Ibn Bana's book with that of 
Ishaq al-Mausili, has small opinion of its worth. 1 " His 
haughtiness and pride were excessive," we are told. 
He died at Samarra of leprosy. 2 

Abu Hashisha or Abu Ja'far Muhammad ibn 'All 
ibn Umayya, was a clever tunburist who flourished at the 
courts from the time of Al-Ma'mun (813-33) to Al- 
Mu'tamid (870-92). He had some reputation also as a 
composer and musical litterateur. Several of his melodies 
are mentioned in the great Kitdb al-aghdni? whilst 
two of his books, a Kitdb al-mughanni al-majid (Book 
of the Glorious Singer) and a Kitdb akhbdr al-tunburiyyin 
(Stories of the Tunburists), are mentioned in the Fihrist. 
Among his pupils was the celebrated Jahza al-Barmaki. 4 

Ahmad ibn Sadaqa ibn Abi Sadaqa was the son and 
grandson of famous musicians at the court of Harun, 
and he himself was one of the greatest performers on the 
tunbur from the time of Al-Ma'mun (813-33) to 
Al-Mutawakkil (847-61), hence his surname Al-Tunburi. 
He was besides an excellent composer in the ramal, 
hazaj and mdkhuri rhythmic modes. 5 

Bunan ibn 'Amr [al-Harith] 6 was an adroit musician 
at the courts of Al-Mutawakkil (847-61) and Al-Muntasir 
(861-2). It was this musician that the poetess Fadl 
fell in love with, and of whom Al-Buhturi (d. 897) wrote : 

" The ud (lute) resounds with pleasing tune 

Under the arm of Bunan, 
Whilst Zunam's hand just as nimbly 
Plays upon the mizmdr (reed-pipe)." 

With Al-Muntasir, Bunan was specially preferred. 7 
Abu' All al-Hasan al-Masdud was the son of a 

1 Aghani, v, 52. 

1 Aghdnl, xiv, 52-55. Fihrist, 145. Ibn Khallikan, ii, 414. 

8 Aghani, viii, 173. xi, 32. xiv, 54. 

Aghani, xxi, 257. Fihrist, 145. 

Aghani, xix, 137-9. xxi, 154. 

I have added al-Harith following Al-Mas'udl. He is the Shaiban 
ibn al-IJarith al-'Awwadh mentioned by Von Hammer, iv, 744. The 
great Kitdb al-aghdnl only refers to him as Bunan, or Bunan ibn 'Amr 
al-Mughanni. 

7 Aghani, viii, 176-8, 184, 186 ; xvii, 8; xxi, 179, 184. Al-Mas'udl, 
vii, 294. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 159 

butcher of Baghdad. He was an admirable composer, 
and as a tunburist he was considered by Jahza al-Barmaki, 
the historian of the tunburists, as the foremost performer 
of his day. He, too, was surnamed Al-Tunburi on 
this account. He flourished at the courts of Al-Wathiq 
(842-47), Al-Mutawakkil (847-61), and Al-Muntasir 
(861-2). * Ibn 'Abd Rabbihi says that he was " one of 
the ablest men in singing," and we read of him with 
Zunain (Ahmad ibn Yahya al-Makki) and Dubais, at 
the house of Abu 'Isa ibn al-Mutawakkil. 2 

'Abdallah ibn Abf l-'Ala' was a musician of Samarra, 
and a pupil of Ishaq al-Mausili. He is praised in the 
great Kitdb al-aghdni for his superior talents. 3 It was of 
this minstrel that a poet wrote : 

" When Ibn Abi'l-'Ala' is with us, 
Then welcome be company and wine." 

Ahmad ibn 'Abdallah ibn Abfl-'Ala/, son of the above, 
was also a fine musician. He flourished at the courts 
of Al-Mu'tadid (892-902). Mukhariq and 'Alluyah were 
his teachers. 4 

'Amr al-Maidani was a famous singer and tunburist, 
who was born at Baghdad. Jahza al-Barmaki says, 
on the authority of Abu'l-'Ubais ibn Hamdun, that 
whilst both Abu Hashisha and Al-Hasan al-Masdud 5 
were considered to be the first among contemporary 
tunburists, 'Amr al-Maidani really surpassed them both. 6 

Jirab al-Daula was the name given to Abu 1 !-' Abbas 
Ahmad ibn Muhammad ibn 'Alluyah (?) al-Sajzi. He 
was a clever tunburist, although more celebrated perhaps 
as the author of a book of " rare and laughable stories " 
entitled the Kitdb tarwih al-arwah wa miftdh al-surur 
wa'l-afrdh (Alleviation of the Spirits and the Key to 
Joy and Gladness). 7 

1 Aghanl, xxi, 256-8. 
1 'Iqd al-farld, iii, IQI. 

* Aghanl, xx, 114. 

* Aghanl, viii, 88 ; ix, 34 ; xx, 114. 

The name is written Masturad in both the Bulaq and SasI editions 
of the Aghanl. 

9 Aghanl, xx, 66-7. Fihrist, 153. 



160 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

Ibn al-Qassar or Abu Fa<Jl Sulaiman ibn 'AH, was 
another good tunburist praised by Jahza al-Barmaki. 
He appears to have been the favourite accompanist to 
Al-Mu'tazz (866-69), w h was himself a musician, and 
we are told that every time Ibn al-Qassar performed, 
this khalif gave him a hundred pieces of gold. 1 

'Abdallah ibn al-' Abbas ibn al-Fadl ibn al-Rabfi was 
a singer, poet and composer who was celebrated at the 
courts from the time of Harun (786-813) to Al-Muntasir 
(861-2) ! He was a great admirer of Ishaq al-Mausili. 
Al-Mutawakkil was particularly partial to him. Two 
of his compositions were celebrated. 2 

Muhammad ibn Ahmad ibn Yahya al-Makki was the 
son and grandson of famous musicians, and a well-known 
singer at the court of Al-Mu'tamid (870-92). He became 
noted for his pupils. 3 

The Ziryab family in Al-Andalus carried on the musical 
reputation of its founder, the illustrious Abu'l-Hasan 
'All ibn Nafi'. The latter had six sons and two 
daughters, " all of whom/' says Al-Maqqari, " sang and 
practised the art of music." Their names were : 'Abd 
al-Rahman, 'Ubaidallah, Yahya, Ja'far, Muhammad, 
Al-Qasim, and the daughters Hamduna and 'Ulayya. 
'Abd al-Rahman inherited his father's talents and 
carried on the music-school, but he displeased the aris- 
tocracy by the undue familiarity which he assumed. 
He was an extremely vain man, and in singing he asserted 
that he had no equal. Ahmad had his father's poetic 
gifts, whilst Al-Qasim was considered the finest singer of 
the family. The best all-round musician was 'Ubaidallah. 
The daughter Hamduna married the wazir Hisham ibn 
'Abd al-'Aziz, and Al-Maqqari says that she " excelled 
in singing " and was more proficient than her sister 
'Ulayya. 4 

Qurais al-Jarrahi, sometimes called Qurais al-Mughanni 
(d. 936), was another contemporary musician of merit 
in the Baghdad Khalif ate, and is called " one of the 

1 Aghanl, xii, 167-8. 
1 Aghanl, xyii, 121-41. 

Aghanl, vi, 17. 

* Al-Maqqari, Analectes, ii, 89. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 161 

clever ones of the musicians, and among the most learned 
of them." He wrote an important work entitled the 
Kitab sina'at al-ghind* wa akhbdr al-mughanniyyin 
(The Art of the Song and Stories of the Singers), which 
dealt with the songs in alphabetical order. He did not 
live to complete his work, but what was finished and given 
to the public, comprised about a thousand folios. 1 

Jahza al-Barmakl was the name generally given to 
Abul-Hasan Ahmad ibn Ja'far ibn Musa ibn Khalid ibn 
Barmak (ca. 839-938). Ibn Khallikan says that he was 
" a man of talent and a master of various accomplish- 
ments. 1 ' In the Fihrist we are told that he was " a poet 
and a singer, innate in poetry and clever in the art of 
singing to the tunbur, and well educated. " Al-Khatlb 
al-Baghdadi says that he was " the first singer of his 
time/' He was taught the tunbur (pandore) by no less 
a master than Abu Hashisha. " He had met the learned 
and the narrators, and had studied under them, and had 
a great reputation in this respect/' His books, a Kitab 
al-tunburiyyin (Book of Tunburists) and a Kitab al- 
nadim (Book of the Boon Companion) became famous. 
The author of the great Kitab al-aghani quotes from the 
former work, although he censures Jahza for calumniating 
several musicians, and insists that it is the duty of a 
biographer to bring out the best points in the life of a 
person, not the worst. 2 In spite of his talents, Jahza 
appears to have had a small mind, and even the author 
of the Fihrist speaks of his " meanness of soul/' He was 
favoured at the courts of Al-Mu'tadid (892-902) and 
Al-Muqtadir (908-32). It was 'Abdallah ibn al-Mu'tazz 
that nicknamed him Jahza ("cross-eyed"). 3 

Among the lesser known musicians of the period were : 
'Amir ibn Murra, 4 Abul-'Ubais ibn Hamdun, 5 Abu'l- 
'Anbas ibn Hamdun, 6 Abu'l-Fatfl Radhadh, 7 'Ath'ath 

1 Fihrist, 156. 
1 Aghdnl, v, 161. 

* Aghani, v, 32. See Guidi, 262. Fihrist, 145-6. Al-Mas'udl, viii, 
261. Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., i, 118. 

4 Aghani, xx, 35-6. 

8 Aghani, xix, 118-19 ; xx, 10-11, 66. 

Aghdnl, -x.il, 3 ; xiv, 162. 
Aghanl, xii, 32, 59. 



162 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

al-Aswad, 1 and Ibn al-Mariqi, 2 all of whom were present 
at the court of Al-Mutawakkil (847-61). One of the 
principal men of state under this khalif, Ibrahim ibn 
al-Mudabbir, patronized several of these musicians. 3 
Nashwan was a singer in the house of 'Abdallah ibn 
al-Mu'tazz. 4 Ibrahim ibn Abfl-'Ubais, 5 Kaniz, Al- 
Qasim ibn Zurzur, 6 Ibrahim ibn al-Qasim ibn Zurzur 7 
and Wasif al-Zamir, 8 were minstrels at the court of Al- 
Muqtadir (908-32). 

Among the songstresses, some famous names have been 
preserved. 

Mahbuba (" Beloved ") was a half-caste born at Al- 
Basra who became the property of a man of al-Ta'if. 
She was given a fine education, and became a good singer 
and lutenist, but above all an exquisite poetess. 'Abdallah 
ibn Tahir purchased her as a gift for Al-Mutawakkil 
(847-61), and the khalif became so infatuated with her 
that he could not bear her out of his sight. After the 
assassination of Al-Mutawakkil, a number of court song- 
stresses including Mahbuba, passed into the hands of 
Wasif al-Turki, the wazir, and when she first appeared 
before him, she was still dressed in mourning for her 
late master, which the wazir, at first, appeared to be 
amused at. When, however, he commanded her to sing 
she took her lute and sang some elegaic verses in memory 
of Al-Mutawakkil, which so enraged Wasif that he had 
her flung into prison. At the demand of the Turkish 
captain, Bugha/, she was set at liberty on condition that 
she left Samarra. She retired to Baghdad and died 
there in obscurity. 9 

Farida was originally a singing-girl of 'Amr ibn Bana 
the musician, but afterwards passed into the intimate 
circles of the court of Al-Wathiq (842-47) and Al-Muta- 
wakkil (847-61), where her performances were highly 
esteemed. She was a pupil of Shariyya, and a great 

1 Aghanl, xiii, 30-2. * Aghanl, vi, 20-1. 

Aghanl, xix, 114-27. Aghanl, ix, 143. 

Aghanl, v, 32. Aghanl, v, 32. 
7 Aghanl, viii, 44. 

Aghanl, v, 32. 

Aghanl, xix, 132-4. Al-Mas'udI, vii, 281-6. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 163 

admirer of the talents of Ishaq al-Mausili, whose reputa- 
tion she defended when it was assailed. 1 

Mu'nisa was a singing-girl of Al-Ma'mun (8i3-33), 2 
but was later possessed by Muhammad ibn Tahir. There 
is an anecdote of her in the Muruj al-dhahab of Al-Mas'udi, 
as well as some of her verses. 3 

Among the lesser songstresses were : Ziryab (sic) 
whom we find singing before 'Abdallah ibn al-Mu'tazz, 4 
and Salifa, a singing-girl owned by the preceding, who is 
shown performing before Al-Muqtadir (908-32). 5 Shaji 
belonged to 'Ubaidallah ibn 'Abdallah ibn Tahir, and she 
sang to Al-Mu'tadid (892-902). 6 Bunan was another 
singing-girl who appeared before Al-Mutawakkil (847-61). 7 

In Al-Andalus there were also some famed songstresses. 

Qamar was the name of a songstress who graced the 
court of Ibrahim ibn al-Hajjaj (d. 900), the amir of Seville 
and Carmona. He purchased her for an immense sum 
from Abu Muhammad al-'Udhri, a grammarian of 
Al-Hijaz. She was noted for her eloquence, erudition, 
and her cleverness as a composer of music (alhdn). 8 

Tarab 9 was a singing-girl presented by a merchant to 
Al-Mundhir, a son of 'Abd al-Rahman II, who sent his 
donor in return a thousand gold pieces. She " excelled 
in music (ghina')." 1Q 

Uns al-Qulub was one of the most famous of the singing- 
girls who shed lustre on the Zahira palace of 'Abd al- 
Rahman III. 11 

Bazya was a singing-girl of 'Uthman, the son of 
Muhammad I (852-86). 12 

It has already been pointed out how musical literature 
had grown. Historians, biographers, and writers on the 

I Aghdnl, iii, 183-6. v, 95-6. viii, 166. 

* Al-Mas'udi says that she was a slave of Al-Mahdl (775-85). 
' Aghdnl, vii, 36. xx, 57. Al-Mas'udi, vii, 387-93. 

4 Aghdnl, ix, 142-3. She may be identical with the songstress Zaryat 
(ix, 35) mentioned already (ante p. 148). 

* Aghdnl, v, 32. 

Aghdnl, viii, 44-6. She is called Sajl in the Nihdyat al~arab t v, 66 . 
f Aghdnl, xxi, 179. 

8 Al-Maqqari, Analcctes, ii, 97. Dozy, ii, 313-14. 

Called Tarb by Ribera. 

10 Al-Maqqari, Analectes, ii, 391. Moh. Dyn., i, 17. 

II Al-Maqqari, Analectes, i, 406 

11 Ibn al-Qutiyya. 80. 



164 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

theory of music had sprung up on all sides, and among 
them were some of the foremost names in the annals of 
Arabic literature. 

'All al-Isfahani (897-967) or Abu'l-Faraj 'AH ibn 
al-Husain ibn Muhammad al-Quraishi, was born at 
Isfahan, although he was an Arab who claimed descent 
from Marwan the last Umayyad khalif. Educated at 
Baghdad, he settled nominally at Aleppo under the 
patronage of the Hamdanids, although he led the life of 
the ordinary literary man in travel. He was a most 
painstaking collector of poetry and songs, and Al-Tanukhl 
(d. 994) said of him : "I never found a person knowing 
by heart such a quantity as he did of poems, songs, 
etc." 1 At Aleppo, he compiled his famous Kitab al- 
aghdni (Book of Songs), a work of the first rank among the 
literary productions of the Arabs. 2 It took a lifetime 
to compile, and the vast erudition displayed, to say 
nothing of the enormous industry and patience which it 
engendered, leaves one abashed at the productions which 
pass as " musical literature " to-day. Besides being a 
history of Arabian music from the days of Idolatry to 
the tenth century, it is a storehouse of information on 
almost every phase of the social life of the Arabs. Ibn 
Khaldun calls it " the register (diwari) of the Arabs/ 1 
and the " final resource of the student of belles lettres" 
Saif al-Daula the Hamdanid sultan gave the author a 
thousand pieces of gold on account of this work, whilst 
the Andalusian sultan Al-Hakam II bestowed a similar 
amount. 

The text of this monumental work was published by 
the Bulaq Press in twenty volumes in 1868, whilst a 
twenty-first volume was issued at Ley den in 1888 by 
Brunnow. 3 Guidi then followed with his invaluable 
Tables alphabetiques du Kitab al-aghani (1895-1900). 
A more correct edition of the Agham (known as the 
Sasl edition) under the editorship of Ahmad al-Shanqiti 
was afterwards issued at Cairo (1905-6), together with 

1 Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., ii, 249. 
"Huart, Arab. Lit., 185. 

Wellhausen, in the Z.D.M.G., i, 145-51, also added fresh material. 
See J.R.A.S. (1927), 905-6, re a new edition of the Aghftni. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 165 

Guidi's tables amended in Arabic. Since then Muhammad 
'Abd al-Jawwad al-Asma'I has issued his Ta$hlh kitdb 
al-aghdm (Cairo, 1916), and now an entirely new edition 
of the " Songs " is being published. Both Quatrem^re 1 
and Kosegarten 2 began translating the work, the former 
in French and the latter in Latin. 

Al-Isfahani was also the author of a Kitdb al-qiydn 
(Book of Singing-Girls), 3 Kitdb al-imd* al-shawd'ir (Book 
of Female Slave Poets), Kitdb mujarrad al-aghdni (Book 
of Choice Songs), 4 Kitdb al-ghilmdn al-mughanniyyin 
(Book of Slave Singers), Kitdb akhbdr Jahza al-Barmaki 
(Book of Stories of Jahza al-Barmaki), and a Kitdb 
al-hdndt (Book of Taverns). 5 

Al-Mas'udi (d. ca. 957) or Abul-Hasan 'AH ibn al- 
Husain ibn 'All al-Mas'udi, came of a family of Al-Hijaz, 
one of his ancestors, Mas'ud, having been a " Companion 
of the Prophet." He was born at Baghdad in the last 
years of the third century of the Hijra. From his 
earliest years he had a passion for travel, and in the year 
912 we find him at Multan, and three years later in Pars 
and Kirman. He again penetrated India, journeying 
from there, possibly by the Deccan, to Ceylon, Madagascar 
and to the coast of 'Uman. It is not improbable that he 
even travelled as far as the Malay archipelago and the 
seaboard of China. We certainly know that he visited 
the shores of the Caspian and the Red Sea. 

His great work, the Akhbdr al-zamdn, is a universal 
history from the " Creation of the world to the year 947." 
It was completed in thirty volumes, of which, but a soli- 
tary volume, now at Vienna, has been preserved. The 
Muruj al-dhahab and the Kitdb al-awsdt, are two other 
important works from his pen, the former being an ex- 

1 Journal Asiatique (1835). 

Liber Cantilenarum Magnus (ca. 1840-43). 

Thus in Ibn Khallikan, but Quatremere reads Kitdb al-nabat (Book 
of Vegetation). 

It was an issue of the Kitdb al-aghanl, without the historical or 
biographical material. 

Quatremere calls this a " Recueil d'airs " as though it were Kitdb al- 
alhdn, but cf . Kosegarten, Lib. Cant., 196. For the life of Al-Isfahani, 
see Ibn Khallikan, ii, 249-52. Wflstenfeld, Die Geschichtschreiber der 
Araber, No. 132. 

M 



166 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

tract from the Akhbdr al-zamdn, and the latter an abridg- 
ment of it. 

It is in the Muruj al-dhahab (Meadows of Gold) that we 
find a section devoted to the early history of Arabian 
music, part of which was derived from an earlier authority, 
Ibn Khurdadhbih (d. ca. 912). The text of this work to- 
gether with a translation in French was issued by Barbier 
de Meynard in 1861-77 under the title of Les prairies 
d'or. Al-Mas'udi was particularly interested in music, 
and he tells us in his Muruj al-dhahab t that in his other 
books he dealt " fully with the question of music, the 
various kinds of musical instruments (maldhi), dances, 
rhythms (hwaq, sing, turqa), 1 and notes (nagham)," as 
well as " the kinds of instruments used by the Greeks, 
Byzantines, Syrians, Nabataeans, and the people of 
Sind, India, Persia, etc." In his Kitdb al-zulaf he dealt 
with interval ratios (mundsabat al-nagham lil'awtdr), 
as well as the influence of melodies on the soul. In 
his Akhbdr al-zamdn and Kitdb al-awsdt, he also 
gave some " curious details about the concerts and 
musical instruments of these peoples." 2 Al-Mas'udi is 
counted among the greatest of Arab historians, worthy 
of rank beside Al-Tabari and Ibn al-Athir. Ibn Khaldun 
calls him " The imam of the historians." 3 

Ibn 'Abd Rabbihi (860-940) or Ahmad ibn Muhammad, 
was an Andalusian Arab known by his anthology the 
'Iqd al-farid (The Unique Necklace). It contains twenty- 
five sections, each of which is named after a precious 
stone. One section (kitdb al-ydqutat al-thdniyya) is de- 
voted to " The Science of Melodies, and the Disagreement 
of People about them," which deals with a number of 
interesting topics, including the lawfulness of listening to 
music, the origin of the song, biographies of musicians, 
etc. Several editions of the text have been printed at 
Bulaq and Cairo, 4 but there is no translation at present. 

1 The text has farab and Barbier de Meynard translates it as 
rhythms. For that reason I suggest that the word should be turaq. 

Al-Mas'udi, ii, 322. 

1 Prairies d'or, avant-propos. Quatremere, Journal Asiatique, 
Ser. iii, Tome vii. 

Bulaq, A. H., 1293. Cairo, A. H., 1303, et seq. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 167 

The family of Abu Mansur al-Munajjim, famous as 
astrologers, poets, historians, and " Boon Companions " 
to the khalif s, were all keen musicians. The first of them, 
Yahya ibn Abi Mansur, was a freeman of Al-Mansur 
(754-75), and was very intimate with Al-Ma'mun (813-33). 
He died about the year 831. His two sons, Muhammad 
and 'All, were both interested in music. 

Muhammad ibn Yahya ibn Abi Mansur was a man 
" of eloquence and good education/' says the Fihrist. 
He " had a knowledge of music and of the stars." 
Among his books was a Kitab akhbdr al-shu'ard' (Stories 
of the Poets). 1 

'All ibn Yahya ibn Abi Mansur (d. 888) was especially 
noted as a poet, musician, and reciter (rdwl) of verses 
and stories, all of which he learnt from Ishaq al-Mausili. 
At first he attached himself to Muhammad ibn Ishaq 
ibn Ibrahim al-Musa'bi, the governor of Fars, but finally 
he accepted service at the court of Al-Mutawakkil (847-61) 
and became his " Boon Companion." This position he 
held under successive khalifs down to the time of Al- 
Mu'tamid (870-92). The Fihrist says : " He used to sit 
in front of their thrones and they would impart to him 
their secrets." Ibn Khallikan says that " his skill lay 
particularly in music (ghina), which had been taught 
him by Ishaq al-Mausili, with whom he was personally 
acquainted." Among his books were : a Kitab al- 
shu'ard' al-qudamd* wa'l-Isldmiyya (Book of Poets 
Ancient and Modern), and a Kitab akhbdr Ishaq ibn 
Ibrahim (Stories of Ishaq al-Mausili). His two sons, 
Yahya and Harun, became well-known authors. 2 

Yahya ibn 'All ibn Yahya ibn Abi Mansur (856-912) 
was " Boon Companion " to Al-Muwaffaq, the brother of 
Khalif Al-Mu'tamid (870-92). He was also a learned 
metaphysician of the Mu'tazali school, an excellent poet, 
and a gifted music theorist, well acquainted with the 
writings of the Greeks. Specimens of his poetry delivered 
by him before Al-Mu'tamid (892-902) and Al-Muktafi 

1 Fihrist, 143, 

Fihrist, 143. Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., ii, 312. Wafayat 
al-a'yan, \, 506. Guidi, 500. 



168 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

(902-08) have been preserved by Al-Mas'udi. 1 Among 
his books were : a Kitab al-bdhir (Book of the Illuminat- 
ing) on stories of the half-caste poets, 2 and a Kitab 
al-nagham (Book on the Notes). 3 This latter is quoted 
in the great Kitab al-aghdnl as an important work. 
The British Museum has a solitary exemplar of a treatise 
from his pen entitled a Risdla ffl-musiql (Treatise on 
Music), which maybe identical with the afore-mentioned 
book. 4 Apparently he was also the author of a work on 
singing. 5 

'All ibn Harun ibn 'All ibn Yahya ibn Abi Mansur 
(890-963), a nephew of the preceding, was " a reciter of 
poetry and a poet ; learned, witty, a metaphysician, and 
a religious writer (hibra')" He was " Boon Companion " 
to a number of the khalifs, and he wrote a musical work 
entitled Kitab risdla fi'l-farq bain Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi 
wa Ishdq al-Mausilifi'l-ghind' (Treatise on the Difference 
between Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi and Ishaq al-Mausill 
concerning music). 6 His verse set to music was very 
popular. 7 

Harun ibn 'All ibn Harun ibn Yahya ibn Abi Mansur, 
a son of the preceding, was " a poet and learned man, 
pre-eminent in discourse, and acquainted with music/' 
He was the author of a Kitab mukhtdr fi'l-aghdm (Book 
of Choice Songs). 8 

The family of Tahir, which furnished generals, prefects, 
governors and statesmen for the Khalifate, were all keen 
patrons of music and many of them clever musicians to 
boot. The great Tahir was the founder of the Tahirid 
dynasty (820), and his son, 'Abdallah ibn Tahir (d. 844), 
was not only a generous supporter of music, 9 but a clever 
performer, who sang his own compositions before 

1 Al-Mas'udi, viii, 206, 222, 238. 

Fihrist, 143. 

Aghdni, viii, 26. Kamil, viii, 57. 

British Museum MS. Or. 2361, fol. 236, v. 

A passage m the British Museum MS. runs, " We have mentioned 
in our book before this, the description of the singer, and what sort of man 
he must be, and we have described what is requisite in him for that." 

Fihrist, 144. 

Ibn Khalhkan, Biog. Diet., i, 313. 

Fihrist, 144. 

Aghanl, xiv, 55, 



THE 'ABBASIDS 169 

Al-Ma'mun. His two sons, Muhammad and 'Ubaidallah, 
were great enthusiasts for the art. 1 

'Ubaidallah ibn 'Abdallah ibn Tahir (d. ca. 912) was 
a " Boon Companion " of Al-Mu'tadid (892-902) and 
Al-Muktafi (902-08), and was Commander of the Police 
Guards at Baghdad. His life is given in the great 
Kitdb al-agham, where he is counted as " the first in the 
philosophy of music." 2 His book, the Kitdb fi'l-nagham 
wa 'Hal al-aghdnl al-musammd (Book on the Notes and the 
Denominated Songs), 3 is placed among the chefs d'ceuvre 
on the theoretical and practical science of music of the 
period. 4 We read of him and the sons of Hamdun having 
correspondence with 'Abdallah ibn al-Mu'tazz (who was 
also " clever in the science and art of music ") on the 
question of certain notes in the ancient song. 6 

Mansur ibn Talha ibn Tahir, a cousin of the preceding, 
was also a musical theorist, and the author of a Kitdb 
mu'nis ffl-mmiqi (Companion Book on Music) according 
to the method of Al-Kindl. 6 

Ibn Khurdadhbih (d. ca. 912) or Abu'l-Qasim 'Ubaidallah 
[ibn 'Abdallah] ibn Khurdadhbih, was of Persian origin, 
his grandfather being a Magian converted to Islam. His 
father was governor of Tabaristan, but 'Ubaidallah 
was educated in Baghdad, being instructed in music and 
belles lettres by Ishaq al-Mausill. He was Director of the 
Posts in Al-Jabal (? Al-'Iraq), and was at Samarra between 
844 and 848, when he wrote his famous Kitdb al-masdlik 
wa'l-mamdlik (Book of Routes and Kingdoms). He 
afterwards became " Boon Companion " to Al-Mu'tamid 
(870-92), and " was intimate with him." It was before 
this khalif that he delivered his oration on music, which, 
as reported by Al-Mas'udi, gives us details of the earliest 
musical traditions of the Arabs. 7 Among his other 
books were : a Kitdb adab al-samd' (Book of Liberal 

1 Al-Mas'udi, vii, 347-8. 

Aghanl, viii, 44-46. Philosophy (falsafa) with the Arabs included 
mathematics (with music), logic, medicine, and the natural sciences. 

1 Aghanl, viii, 45. 
4 Aghanl, viii, 54. 

Aghdnl t ix, 141. 

Fihrist, 117. 

1 For further information about this oration see my Studies in 
Oriental Musical Instruments, chap. v. 



170 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

Education in Music), Kitab al-lahw wa'l-maldhi (Book 
of Diversion and Musical Instruments), and a Kitab 
al-nudamd' wa'l-julasa' (Book of Boon Companions and 
Associates). Only the second of these works has been 
preserved to-day, and a solitary exemplar is in the library 
of Habib Afandi al-Zayyat of Alexandria. 1 

Abu'l-Qasim 'Abbas ibn Firnas, who is identified with 
the poet of that name who died in 888, 2 was a man of 
considerable attainments in art, science, and literature. 
He is credited with being the " first who taught the 
science of music in Al-Andalus," and the first to introduce 
the science of prosody as laid down by Al-Khalil. 3 

The family of Hamdun were noted " Boon Companions " 
to the khalifs. The first of them was Hamdun ibn 
Isma'il ibn Da'ud al-Katib, who was a pupil of Mukhariq 
in music, and a great admirer of the songstress Shariyya. 4 
His three sons were familiar figures at the courts and 
well known for their literary and musical talents. Ahmad 
ibn Hamdun was a chronicler of stories and the author of 
a Kitab al-nudamd' wa'l-julasa' (Book of Boon Com- 
panions and Associates). 5 AbuVUbais ibn Hamdun and 
Abul-'Anbas ibn Hamdun were musicians at the court of 
Al-Mutawakkil (847-61). 6 The family supported the 
Romantic movement of Prince Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi. 7 

Al-Hasan ibn Musa al-Nasibi was the author of two 
musical works, a Kitab al-aghani 'ald'l-huruf (Book of 
Songs in Alphabetical Order) and a Kitab mujarraddt 
al-mughanniyyin (Book of Abstracts of the Singers). The 
former book was written for Al-Mutawakkil (847-61), 
and it is praised in the Fihrist because it contains informa- 
tion about the songs which had not been mentioned by 
Ishaq al-Mausili nor by 'Amr ibn Bana. It gave the 
names of the singers both male and female in the Days of 
Idolatry as well as in Islamic times. 8 

1 Fihrist, 149. Jiajjl Khalifa, v, 509 (cf. the name, Khurdadbih). 
De Goeje, Bibl. Geog. Arab., vi, preface. Hilal, xxviii, 214. 
1 Al-Maqqarl, Moh. Dyn., i, 426. 

Al-Maqqarl, Moh. Dyn., i, 148. See L' 'aviation chez les Musulmans, 
by Ahmad ZakI Basha (Cairo, 1912). 

4 Aghdni, vhi, 168. ix, 35. xiv, in. 

Fihrist, 144. Aghdnl, xii, 3. xx, 10-11. 
Aghdnl, ix, 35. Fihrist, 145. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 171 

Hammad ibn Ishaq al-Mauili was a son and grandson 
of two of the most famous musicians in Islam. He was a 
pupil and disciple of Abu 'Ubaida and Al-Asma'i, and 
studied music under his father, who also taught him the 
sciences. Al-Suli says : "He was a learned traditionist 
and shared with his father much of his [ability in] music." 
He wrote a number of books, mostly biographies of the 
poets. 1 

Al-Madini, or Abu Ayyub Sulaiman ibn Ayyub ibn 
Muhammad al-Madini, belonged, as his name tells us, 
to Al-Medina. According to the Fihrist, he was " one 
of the ingeniously learned, acquainted with music (ghina) 
and with the stories of the singers." Among his books 
were : a Kitab akhbdr l Azza al-Maild* (Stories of 'Azza 
al-Maila/), Kitab Ibn Misjah (Book of Ibn Misjah), 
Kitab qiydn al-Hijdz (Book of the Singing-Girls of Al- 
Hijaz), Kitab qiydn Makka (Book of the Singing-Girls 
of Mecca), Kitab tabaqdt al-mughanniyyin (Book of the 
Ranks of the Singers), Kitab al-nagham wa'l-tqd' (Book 
of Notes and Rhythm), Kitab al-munddimm (Book of 
Boon Companions), Kitab akhbdr Ibn 'A'isha (Stories of 
Ibn 'A'isha), Kitab akhbdr Hunain al-Hlri (Stories of 
Hunain al-HIri), Kitab Ibn Suraij (Book of Ibn Suraij), 
and a Kitab Al-Gharid (Book of Al-Gharld). 2 

Ibn Tarkhan, or Abul-Hasan 'All ibn Hasan, was a 
good singer and litterateur, and among his books was one 
entitled Kitab akhbdr al-mughanniyyin al-funburiyyin 
(Book of Stories of the Singers of the Tunburists). 3 

Ibn Al-Dubbi (d. 920), or Abul-Tayyib Muhammad 
ibn al-Mufaddal ibn Salama al-Dubbi, was an eminent 
Shafi'I doctor of Baghdad and a renowned philologist 
who had studied under Ibn al-A'rabi, who had been a 
pupil of his father. Among his books is a Kitab al-ud 
wa'l-maldhi (Book on the Lute and Musical Instruments), 
a solitary copy of which exists at Cairo. 4 

One of the outstanding features of the period was the 
contribution of the Greek Scholiasts to the theoretical art 

1 Fihrist, 142-3. 

Fihrist, 148. 

Fihrist, 156. 

Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., ii, 610. Hildl, xxviii, 214. 



172 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

as has already been stressed. Following in the footsteps 
of the scholars of the Bait al-hikma, the Banu Musa, 
and Al-Kindi, there came Al-SarakhsI, Thabit ibn Qurra, 
Qusta ibn Luqa, Muhammad ibn Zakariyya al-RazI, 
and Al-Farabi. 

Al-Sarakhsi (d. 899) or Ahmad ibn Muhammad ibn 
Marwan al-Sarakhsi, 1 who was also called Ahmad ibn 
al-Tayyib, was the greatest pupil of Al-Kindi, and was 
even known as Tilmidh al-Kindl (pupil of Al-Kindi). 
He was born at Sarakhs in Khurasan, and became tutor to 
the son of Al-Muwaffaq, afterwards Khalif Al-Mu'tadid 
(892-902), who made him a member of his suite and 
Director of Weights and Measures in Baghdad. Un- 
fortunately, the choler of the khalif was aroused against 
this eminent scientist on account of a secret having been 
betrayed. He was put to death and his property con- 
fiscated. 2 Al-Sarakhsi, like his teacher, was learned in 
most of the sciences, including mathematics, logic, 
astronomy, music, and philosophy, and he left more than 
thirty works on these subjects. Among his theoretical 
works on music were : a Kitab al-madkhal ild f ilm al- 
musiqi (Introduction to the Science of Music), Kitab 
al-musiqi al-kabir (Opus Major on Music), Kitab al- 
musiql al-saghir (Opus Minor on Music). Unlike a 
number of the scientific writers on music at this period, 
he was also keenly interested in the practical side of the 
art, as we are told in the great Kitab al-aghdni, and he 
wrote such works as : Kitab al-lahw wa'l-maldhi fi'l- 
ghind* wa'l-mughanniyyin . . . (Book of Joy and Diversion 
in the Song and the Singers, etc.), a Kitab nuzhat al- 
mufakkir al-sdhi fi'l-mughanniyyin wa'l-ghind' wa'l- 
maldhi (Book of Diversion for the Perplexed Thinker 
concerning the Singers, the Song, and Musical Instru- 
ments), and a Kitab al-dalalat 'aid asrdr al-ghind' (Book 
of Guidance in the Secrets of Singing). 3 

1 Collangettes, Journal Asiatique, Nov.-Dec. 1904, p. 382, and 
Rouanet, Encyclopedic de la musique (Lavignac), v, 2679, both write 
Sarshardhl. 

1 Arrested in 896, he languished in prison until his execution in 899. 

Fihrist, 149, 261. Ibn Abl Uaibi'a, i, 214. Al-Mas'udl, viii, 179. 
Aghdnl, -viii, 54. xix, 136. Casiri, i, 406. Hajj! Khalifa, v, 161. 
Ahlwardt, Verz. No. 5536 (2). 



THE 'ABBASIDS 173 

Thabit ibn Qurra Abu'l Hasan (836-901) was a abian 
of Harran in Mesopotamia. He was one of the most 
brilliant of the scholars of his day who studied the 
" exact sciences " including music. Owing to his ration- 
alism, he was persecuted, and was finally driven into re- 
tirement at Kafartutha. Here he met Muhammad ibn 
Musa ibn Shakir, who brought him to Baghdad, 1 where 
he was given the opportunity to devote himself to scientific 
study. He became the greatest mathematician of his 
day, and was the first to apply algebra to geometry. 
Among his music books were the following : Kitab fl 
'Urn al-musiqi (Book on the Science of Music), Maqdla 
ffl-musiqi (Discourse on Music), Kitab al-mtisiqi (Book 
of Music), and a Kitab fl dlat al-zamr (Book of the Wind 
Instrument). 2 Hajji Khalifa mentions a work entitled 
Kitab fi'l-musiqi in fifteen sections, which is probably 
identical with one of the above. 3 Some of these works 
were known to the practical musicians of the period. 4 

Qusta ibn Luqa al-Ba'albakl (d. 932) was a Melchite 
Christian of Ba'albak in Syria. We are told that he 
" greatly excelled in the science of medicine, philosophy, 
geometry, arithmetic, numerals, and music," and was 
the author of several translations from the Greek as well 
as of many original treatises. He was employed by 
Al-Musta'm (852-66), and was alive in the reign of Al- 
Muqtadir (908-32), hence his death is given as 932. 
On the other hand Suter places his death about 912, 
whilst an earlier date (890 or 900) is even suggested. 5 
Casiri mentions a Liber de musica by Qusta ibn Luqa, 
which in the Arabic text is really a Kitab al-qarastun 
(Book of the Steelyard), and has nothing to do with 
music. His Greek translations were of inestimable benefit 
to succeeding generations. 8 

1 He is said to have introduced Thabit to Khalif Al-Mu'tadid (892-902), 
but this cannot be correct if Muhammad ibn Musa died in 873. 

Probably a treatise on some type of organ. See my Studies \n 
Oriental Musical Instruments, Chap. iii. 

Fihrist, 272. Casin, i, 390-1. Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Dict. t i t 288. 
Ibn Abl Usaibi'a, i, 216. Hajji Khalifa, v, 161. Ibn al-Qiftl, 115. 

4 Aghdni, viii, 54. 

Suter, Die Mathematiker u. Astronomen der Araber, 41. Ency. of 
Islam, ii, 1081. 

Fihrist, 295. Casiri, i, 420. Ibn Abl Usaibi'a, i, 244. Ibn al- 
Qiftl, 262. 



174 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn Zakariyya al-Razi (d. 923) 
was born at Al-Raiy. Abu Da'ud ibn Juljul says of Al-Razi 
that he was a practical musician who " in his youth 
played on the l ud (lute) and cultivated music." In his 
twentieth year, however, he abandoned these arts and 
came to Baghdad to study the sciences. Here, he became 
the pupil of 'All ibn Sahl ibn Rabban, the personal 
physician to Al-Mu'tasim (833-42). Later, Al-Razi be- 
came director of the Baghdad hospital, and was considered 
the greatest medical authority of his time. For centuries 
the works of Rhazes, as he was called in Latin, were the 
text-books for European doctors. Finally, he rose to 
be a court dignitary with the Samanid prince Al-Mansur 
ibn Ishaq, to whom he dedicated his great medical treatise 
the Manftiri. 1 Although Kiesewetter says that he left 
no work on music, Leclerc, the medical historian, mentions 
a " Compendium on Music." 2 This probably refers to the 
Kitdb / jumal al-musiqi (Book of the Summings Up of 
Music) mentioned by Ibn Abi Usaibi'a. Works in 
the Paris Bibliotheque Nationale have been wrongly 
attributed to him, as I have pointed out elsewhere. 3 

Sa'id ibn Yusuf (892-942), better known as Saadia ben 
Joseph the Gaon, was a Jew born in Egypt. Emigrating 
to Palestine in 915, he became famous by his controversy 
with the Qaraites and the celebrated Ben Meir. In 928 
he was appointed Principal (Gaon) of the Sura Academy in 
Al-'Iraq, but owing to trouble with the Exilarch he was 
deposed two years later, and was not reinstated until 938. 
During the interim, which was spent in literary activity in 
Baghdad, Saadia wrote some of his most important works, 
for the greater part in Arabic, which was the language of 
polite literature among the Jews. 4 Among his works is 
Kitdb al-amdndt wa'l-i'tiqdddt (Book of Philosophical 
Doctrines and Religious Beliefs), which was translated 

1 Fihrist, 299. Ibn Abi Uaibi'a, i, 309. Ibn Khallikan, iii, 311. 
Ibn al-Qiftf, 271. 

1 Leclerc, Hist, de la m6decine arabe, i, 353. 

See my article, Some Musical MSS. Identified in the Journal of the 
Royal Asiatic Society, Jan., 1926. Cf. Collangettes, Journal Asiatique, 
Nov.-Dec., 1904, p. 384, and Lavignac's Encyclopedia de la musique, 
v, 2679. 

4 See Matter, Saadia Gaon : His Life and Works (Philadelphia, 1921). 



. THE 'ABBASIDS 175 

into Hebrew by Judah ben Tibbon (d. 1190). At the end 
of the tenth section (maqdla) of this work there is an 
interesting discussion on music and its influence, which 
appears to have considerable affinity with Arabian 
notions. It is on this account especially that Saadia is 
given a place here. The Arabic text of this work was 
issued by Landauer (Leyden, 1880), whilst the Hebrew 
text was edited by Slucki (Leipsic, 1864). * 

Al-Farabi (ca. 870-950), or in full Abu Nar Muhammad 
ibn Tarkhan, was of Turkish origin, and was born at 
Farab in Transoxiana. Coming to Baghdad he studied 
philosophy under Abu Bishr Matta ibn Yunus, and later 
went to Harran to prosecute studies under Yuhanna 
ibn Khailan. Having mastered the sciences of the 
Greeks, he soon surpassed his contemporaries. 2 We are 
informed that he was " a perfect and erudite musician," 3 
and " an excellent performer on the ud (lute)." 4 His 
fame in music led Saif al-Daula the Hamdanid ruler to 
invite him to settle in Aleppo. Here, the great philosopher 
and music theorist attracted pupils from all parts, who 
thronged to his lectures, which were held in the delightful 
gardens on the outskirts of the city. He wrote on logic, 
ethics, politics, mathematics, alchemy, philosophy, and 
music. Many of these works were translated into Latin, 
and Alpharabius, as he was called in the West, had 
an immense influence on the culture of Mediaeval Europe. 
He has been called " the Second Master " (i.e., Second 
to Aristotle), and " the greatest philosopher the Arabs 
ever produced." 5 

Among his musical writings were : the Kitab al- 
musiql al-kaKr (Grand Book on Music), Kilam fl'l-musiqa 

1 Steinschneider gave another reading from a Bodleian MS. in 
" Beth O'^ar hapharoth," Year I, xxx. See also the same writer's 
Jewish Literature, pp. 154, 337, and Matter, op. cit., pp. 259, 369. 

Soriano-Fuertes, Historia de la musica Espanola, i, 82 ; and 
Saldoni, Diccionario . . . de musicos Espanoles, s.v., would make him an 
Andalusian Arab. Lichtenthal, Dizionario e Bibliographia della 
Musica, s.v., and S. M. Tagore, Universal Hist, of Music, 101, make him 
a khalif I ! 

Abu'1-Fida', Annales Moslem. 

Ibn GhaibI, Shark al-adwar MS. 

Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., iii, 146. 307. Fihrist, 263. Ibn al- 
Qiftl, 277. Ibn Abl Usaibi'a, ii, 134. Casiri, i, 189. 



176 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

(sic. Styles in Music), Kitab fl ih$a al-iqa' (Book on 
the Classification of Rhythm), and Kitdbfi'l-nuqra (? nuqla) 
muddf ild al-iqct (Book of Supplementary Enquiry 
concerning Rhythm). 1 Of these, only the first-named 
appears to have survived, and three copies are preserved 
at Madrid, Leyden, and Milan. The Madrid copy, 
which dates from prior to 1138, appears to have been 
made for the celebrated Ibn Bajja (Avenpace). 2 The 
Milan example dates from I347, 3 and that of Leyden from 
1537, being copied from one dated 1089.* Portions of this 
monumental treatise, both in text and translation have 
been given by Kosegarten in his Alii Ispahanensis Liber 
Cantilenarum Magnus (ca. 1840-43), and in the Zeitschrift 
fur d. Kunde d. Morgenlandes, v. (1850). Soriano- 
Fuertes, in his Mtisica Arabe Espanola y Conexi6n de la 
mtisica con la astronomia, medicina y arquitectura (1854), 
and Land in his Recherches sur I'histoire de la gamme 
arabe (1884), also gave extracts. 6 

Al-Farabi also wrote a second volume to this Kitab 
al-muslqi al-kabir, which has not come down to us. It 
comprised four chapters (maqalat), in which he says 
he examined and commented on the theories of the 
Greeks. 6 It was suggested by Kosegarten, Land, and 
Tripodo, 7 that the manuscript alluded to by Toderini, 
entitled the Majdl al-musiqi (Arena of Music), preserved 
in the 'Abd al-Hamld Library at Constantinople, was 
perhaps, the lost second volume of the Kitab al-mmiqi al- 
kabir* But the title given by these writers was clearly 

1 Steinschneider, Al-Farabi, 79. 

Robles, Catdlogo de los MSS. Arabes . . . Bibl. Nac. de Madrid. 
No. 602. Derenbourg, in Homenaje d D. Franc. Coder a, 612. 

Hammer-Purgstall, Catalogo dei Codici arabi, persiani e turchi della 
Biblioteca Ambrosiana (Bibl. Ital., T. xciy), No. 289. 

4 Catalogue Codicum Orientafaum Bibliothecae Academicae Lugduno 
Batavae, No. 1423. 

It has been said that Jerome of Prague made a translation of part 
of the Kitab al-muslql al-kabir, but see my Arabian Influence on Musical 
Theory, 15-16. 

Zeitschrift f. d. Kunde d. Morgenlandes, v. 150, 159. Munk, 
Melanges, 350. 

7 Kosegarten, Zeit.f. d. Kunde d. Morg., v. 150, but cf. Lib. Cant., 35. 
Land, Recherches, 43, but cf. his Remarks on the Earliest Development of 
Arabic Music (Trans. Inter. Congress of Orientalists, 1892). Tripodo, 
Lo stato degli studii sulla Musica degli Arabi, 13. 

Toderini, Letteratura Turchesca (1787), i, 233. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 177 

an error for Madkhal al-musiql* of which copies exist in 
the 'Abd al-Hamid Library, 2 as well as in other collections 
in Constantinople, 3 and elsewhere. 4 Munk, too, was of 
opinion that the lost work was the one referred to by 
Andres in his Dell' origine,progressi . . . d'ogni Letter atur a* 
This was also incorrect, since Andres says that his inform- 
ation was based on particulars obtained from Casiri 
concerning a MS. in the Escurial, from which we know 
that it was the first volume of the Kitab al-musiql al- 
kabir that was under discussion. 6 

Al-Farabi also deals with music in his Kitab fl ihsd* 
al-ulum (Classification of the Sciences). This work was 
translated into both Latin and Hebrew and is frequently 
quoted by Mediaeval writers, under its Latin title, De 
scientiis, 1 as was another work of Al-Farabi's, known as De 
ortu scientiarum. 8 Another work attributed to Al-Farabi, 
but not mentioned under this title by his biographers, is a 
Kitab al-adwdr now in the Library of Ahmad Taimur. 9 

['All ibn Sa'id al-Andalusi is the name of the author 
of a Tract on Musical Composition mentioned in an old 
catalogue of Oriental manuscripts. 10 Search for the 
identity of the writer and the location of the manuscript 
has been in vain. There is an 'AH ibn Musa al-Maghribi 
called Ibn Sa'id (1214-74 ?), who might conceivably be 
the same individual, 11 but it is more likely that the above 
writer should be identified with the 'All ibn Sa'id al- 
Uqlidisi (early tenth cent.) mentioned in the Fihrist. 12 ] 

1 The original Italian edition of Toderini (as above) has Medchalul 
Musikl, which was clearly intended for what we would transliterate 
madkhal al-mmiql. 

Hajji Khalifa, vii, 520. 

Hajji Khalifa, vii, 318, 400, 453. 

'British Museum MS., Or. 2361, fol. 238, v. 

Munk, Melanges, 350. 

See Toderini, i, 248-52. 

7 Farmer, Arabian Influence on Musical Theory, p. 15. 

Beitrage z. Geschichte d. Philosophie d. Mittelalters, xix. 

Hildl, xxviii, 214. 

10 Catalogue of Oriental Manuscripts purchased in Turkey, belonging 
to Dr. Lee, 1830. Printed by R. Watts, London, 1831. Second Part, 
1840. See my Arabic Musical Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library, 
p. 16. 

"Cf. Brockelmann, i, 313, and 336. 

" Fihrist, 285. AndalusI and UqlldisI could very easily be confused 
by a scribe. 



CHAPTER VII 

THE 'ABBASIDS 

(The Fall ; 945-1258) 

" The soul of man derives many benefits from the song . . . and 
among them the calmness that it brings in the hour of care or pain." 

Al-Husain Ibn Zaila (d. 1048). 

ALTHOUGH this chapter covers nominally the Khalifate of 
Baghdad from the coming of the Buwaihids to the fall 
of the city before the hordes of Hulagu in 1258, it also 
includes, as in the previous chapters, a survey of the 
history of the art in other Arabian lands, and specifically 
that of Al-Andalus up to the rout of the Muwahhids 
(1230), and that of Egypt until the Mamluk period (1250). 

The break-up of the Baghdad Khalifate continued apace, 
and with it much of the culture that had made it illustrious. 
The intellectual and artistic decline only made itself felt 
however, in Al-'Iraq and the capital. Elsewhere, the 
independent kingdoms made up for what was being lost 
through the inactivity of Baghdad. During the Buwaihid 
(945-1055), Saljuqid (1055-1184), and Khwarizmian (1184- 
1231) " protection," some improvement in the cultural 
situation resulted to Al-'Iraq and the capital. Not that 
either of the first two had any particular gifts of refine- 
ment to offer. The coming of these " protectors " simply 
meant a wider patronage to general culture. Indeed, in 
most respects the " protectors " imitated the tastes of the 
" protected." 

These were days as great and as glorious for Arabian 
culture as for Arabian polity, although both refer to 
lands that were outwith the Baghdad Khalifate, that is 
to say, Al-Andalus, Egypt, and Syria. The superiority 



THE 'ABBASIDS 179 

of the Umayyad arms in the West, and of the Ayyubids 
and Zangids in the East, from the tenth to the twelfth 
century, was only to be matched by their surpassing 
culture. This too broke through the walls of Western 
Mediaeval civilization, and gave birth to the Renaissance. 
Elsewhere I have shown that music played an important 
part in this cultural conquest of Western Europe. 1 

i 

By the mid-tenth century, the situation in Al-'Iraq and 
the capital was desperate, and the conquest of the land 
by the Buwaihids was, to some extent, a timely one. 
The conquerors themselves were Iranians from Al-Dailam. 
Since 933 they had been gradually advancing westward, 
wresting provinces from the khalif, 'Iraq 'AjamI,Kirman, 
Fars, and Khuzistan. Their occupation of Baghdad 
checked for a time the lawless domination of the Turkish 
soldiery which had been a menace to the state for a 
century. Further, the Buwaihids, being of the Shf a sect, 
curbed the orthodox fanatics. Scientific and philosophic 
speculation which had long been silent were given freedom 
once more, whilst music and the arts generally enjoyed 
a liberty that had been denied them under the Hanbali 
rigours. 

The khalifs of the Buwaihid period were Al-Muti' 
(946-74), Al-TaT (974-91)* Al-Qadir (991-1031), and 
Al-Qa'im (1031-75), but the " Commander of the Faith- 
ful " exercised as little authority as he did under the 
Turkish soldiery the previous century. With " a mere 
pittance doled out for his support, the office was shorn of 
every token of respect and dignity." 2 Yet Le Strange 
says that at this period " the palaces of the khalifs may be 
considered to have attained their utmost extent and 
splendour/' 3 Here, the same musical extravagance 
appears to have been carried on as in the days of the great 
khalifs. The group of philosophers and music theorists 

1 See my Arabian Influence on Musical Theory (1925), and Facts fof 
the Arabian Musical Influence (1929). 
1 Muir, The Caliphate, 578. 
Le Strange, Baghdad, 



i8o A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

known as the Ikhwan al-Safa', and the bibliographer 
Muhammad ibn Ishaq al-Warraq lived under these rulers. 

Not only in the palaces of the khalif s were music, belles 
lettres, and learning generally patronized, but also in the 
palaces of the Buwaihids. One of the criticisms levelled 
against 'Izz al-Daula (967-77) was that he spent too much 
time with musicians and buffoons. 1 'Adud al-Daula 
(977-82), who built the 'Adudl hospital which for three 
centuries was famous as a school of medicine, 2 was also 
interested in music. 8 Baha' al-Daula (989-1012) had a 
wazw, Fakhr al-Mulk, who protected the song collector 
Al-Maghribi, whilst another wazw, Sabur ibn Ardashir, 
founded the Karkh academy with a library of 10,400 
books. 4 Musharrif al-Daula (1020-25) made Al-Maghribi 
his wazir* Mu'ayyid al-Daula (976-83) of Isfahan had a 
wazir, Ibn 'Abbad, who possessed a library of 140,000 
volumes. 5 Shams al-Daula (997 c. 1021) of Hamadhan 
was a patron of the scientist and music theorist Ibn Sina. 

Whilst the various Buwaihids ruled the Baghdad 
Khalifate, i.e., Al-'Iraq (which included Khuzistan and 
Kirman), 'Iraq 'Ajami (which embraced the Caspian 
provinces), and Pars, Syria, Mesopotamia, and the 
whole of Arabia proper were in the hands of Arab rulers. 
The Hamdanids were established at Al-Mausil (929-91) 
and at Aleppo (944-1003). At the latter city was called 
forth one of the most important artistic and literary 
movements of the century. 6 The 'Uqailids (966-1096) 
succeeded to the lands of the Hamdanids of Al-Mausil 
whilst the Mirdasids (1023-79) followed the Aleppo 
family. Contemporary with these dynasties were the 
Marwanids (990-1150) of Diyar-Bakr, and the Mazyadids 
(1012-1150) of Al-Hilla. 

These Arab dynasties form one of the outstanding 
features of the period, and in spite of the fact that they 

1 The Eclipse of the 'Abbdsid Caliphate, ii, 234. 
8 Le Strange, op. cit., 318. 

The Eclipse of the 'Abbdsid Caliphate, iii, 41, 68. 

4 Margoliouth, Letters of Abu' I-' A Id, xxiv. Journal Asiatique, July, 
1838, p. 50. 

Journal Asiatique, July, 1838, p. 49. Another library at Al-Basra 
at this period numbered 10,000 volumes. 

Huart, Arab. Lit., go. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 181 

did not succeed in re-establishing a purely Arab polity 1 
within the Khalifate (and the Hamdanids occupied 
Baghdad for a while), yet they were mainly responsible for 
a restoration of the indigenous arts and literature. 2 It 
was the Hamdanids, as we have seen, who sheltered Al- 
Farabl the music theorist, and the music historians 
Al-Isfahani and Al-Mas'udl. The 'Uqailids had the song- 
collector Al-Maghribi as their wazir. In the peninsula 
itself, Al-Yaman, Al-Hijaz, and 'Uman, needless to say, 
the Arabs held undisputed sway. 

After a century of beneficent rule by the Buwaihid 
umava\ the Saljuqid Turks became masters of the lands 
of the Khalifate. They came from Jand in Bukhara, and 
had been pushing Westward since 1037, when they drove 
the Ghaznawids from Khurasan and Tabaristan. In 1055 
they conquered 'Iraq 'Ajami and entered Baghdad, 
finally subjugating Syria and Asia Minor, claiming 
dominion from the Caucasus mountains to the borders of 
Afghanistan. The Saljuqids were of the Sunni persuasion, 
i.e., Orthodox Muslims, and they granted considerable 
freedom to the klialif, whom they acknowledged as 
spiritual head, and accepted investiture at his hands. 

Al-Qa'im (1031-75) was the khalif at the Saljuqid 
conquest, and he was succeeded by Al-Muqtadi (1075-94), 
Al-Mustazhir (1094-1118), Al-Mustarshid (1118-35), Al- 
Rashid (1135-36), Al-Muqtafi (1136-60), Al-Mustanjid 
(1160-70), and Al-Mustadi (1170-1180). There is little 
difference between their reigns. Some of them tried their 
hand at gaining independence but with small success. 
Others were content to be mere figure-heads, and spent 
their treasury on keeping up courtly surroundings. Only 
the last two khalifs occupied anything like an independent 
position. Every one of them appears however, to have 
exercised his right to distribute patents of authority to 
tributary malik, sultan, amir or atdbag. 

The Saljuqids divided their dominions among their 
family, the " Great Saljuqids" of Khurasan (1037-1157) 
controlling Al-'Iraq, whilst others ruled in Kirman 

jl Zaidan, 264. 
'bid., 262, 



182 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

(1041-1187), Asia Minor (1077-1300), and Syria (1094- 
1117). The earliest of the " Great Saljuqids " resided at 
Baghdad as well as at Nisabur, and one cannot fail to 
recognize that the protection which they gave to art and 
letters was greater even than that bestowed by the 
khalifs. It was Malik Shah who patronized 'Umar 
al-Khayyam, whilst his wazir, Nizam al-Mulk, founded the 
Nizamiyya colleges at Baghdad and Nisabur. San jar 
(1117-57), the last of the " Great Saljuqids/' was par- 
ticularly attached to music, and his court minstrel, 
Kamal al-Zaman, was far-famed. The 'Iraqian Saljuqid 
Mahmud (1117-31) protected the music theorist and 
scientist Abu'l-Hakam al-Bahili. 

The Saljuqid atdbags or provincial governors soon 
became independent rulers in their various districts. The 
first of these were the Anushtigmids of Khwarizm (1077- 
1231). Then came the Sukmanids of Armenia (noo- 
1207), the Urtuqids of Diyar-Bakr (1101-1408), the 
Burids of Damascus (1103-54) the Zangids of Mesopo- 
tamia and Syria (1127-1250), the Ildigizids of Adharbaijan 
(1136-1225), the Bagtiginids of Arbela (1144-1232), and 
the Salgharids of Fars (i 148-1287) . This decentralization, 
as elsewhere, helped rather than retarded general culture. 
Towns which hitherto had mere provincial standing, now 
began to flourish as centres of government where courts 
were maintained with pomp and ceremony. Music 
theorists like Fakhr al-Dln al-Razi, Muhammad ibn 
Abi'l-Hakam, and Ibn Man' a, were patronized by the 
Anushtigmids, Zangids, and Bagtiginids respectively. 

Although the authority, both temporal and spiritual, 
of the Khalifate of Baghdad was wider under the Saljuqids 
than under the preceding " protectors/' yet the real rulers 
were the Saljuqids, and they were " foreigners." Arabia 
itself however, was still left quite undisturbed in Arab 
hands. Al-Yaman was ruled at Zabld by the Najahids 
(1021-1159) and Mahdids (1159-73), and at San'a by the 
Sulaihids (1037-98) and the Hamdanids (1098-1173), when 
the Egyptian Ayyubids became masters. Al-Hijaz pros- 
pered under the Hashimids until 1202, whilst 'Uman was 
still content with its imams. In Al-Yaman the Najahid 



THE 'ABBASIDS 183 

Sa'id al-Ahwal (1080-89) favoured music and singing. 1 and 
the names of some of the Najahid songstresses have come 
down to us. Under the first of the Mahdids, 'All ibn 
Mahdi (1159) who himself possessed an excellent voice, 
singing and wine were forbidden. 2 The Sulaihid Al- 
Mukarram Ahmad ibn 'All (1080-91) and other rulers 
were particularly attached to music. 3 

It is still necessary to follow the developments political 
and cultural in the extreme East, for we must not forget 
that Islam was a world in itself. What is more, Iranians 
and Turanians were to be found everywhere in the lands 
of the Arabs, even in Al-Yaman, where the Ghuzz managed 
to gain a footing. At the Eastern extremity of the old 
Khalifate theSamanids' dominions had fallen to the Ilak 
Khans (c. 932 c. 1165) of Turkestan, and to the Ghazna- 
wids (962-1186) of Afghanistan. The latter became the 
leaders of Persian culture just as the Samanids had been. 
The literary, artistic, and scientific activity of the 
Ghaznawid rulers throws all the other contemporary 
Islamic courts into the shade. 4 In the mid-twelfth century, 
the Ghurids superseded the Ghaznawids, and their sultans 
were not a whit behind their predecessors in the patron- 
age of culture. Among their proteges was the music 
theorist 'Abd al-Mu'min ibn SafI al-Dln. 

In 1180, the Khalifate fell to Al-Nasir (1180-1225) whose 
set purpose was to restore his office " to its ancient role 
among the nations/' 5 Four years later, chafing at the 
Saljuqid yoke, he invited the Shah of Khwarizm to rid 
him of his irksome suzerain. The shah complied, and 
entering Al-'Iraq in 1184, he exterminated the Saljuqids. 
The next khalifs AlZahir (1225-26) and Al-Mustansir 
(1226-42) were the son and grandson respectively of 
Al-Nasir. This period was one of comparative quiet. 
Under Al-Nasir " leaning flourished " and " schools and 
libraries were patronized/' 6 whilst the famous Al- 

1 Kay, Yaman, Its Ear\y Medieval History, 84, 108, 116. 

8 Ibid., 124. 

8 Ibid., 40, 51, 54. 

4 Browne, Lit. Hist, of Persia, ii, chap. ii. 

8 Muir, The Caliphate, 587. 

Ibid. t 589. 



i84 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

Mustansiriyya college at Baghdad, built by his successor, 
accumulated a library of 80,000 books. But the sands 
of the Khalifate were running low. 

Al-Musta'sim (1242-58) was the last khalif of Baghdad. 
During his reign, much of the ancient pomp and dignity 
of the Khalifate were restored. He was not merely a 
patron of culture, but lived the life of a literary man and 
bibliophile. The author of the Fakhri says that he spent 
many of his leisure hours listening to music. 1 One of the 
most celebrated musicians of Arabian history, Safi 
al-Din 'Abd al-Mu'min, was his chief minstrel. 

In the year 1219, Chingiz Khan and his Mughal hordes 
conquered the Eastern lands of the Khwarizmian empire. 
His son Ugdai completed the conquest in 1231 which 
resulted in the death of the last Shah of Khwarizm. In 
1256, Hulagu, a grandson of the former, crossed the Oxus 
to chastise the Isma/ili. This having been accomplished, 
the khan marched on Baghdad, and in the beginning of 
1258, the " City of Peace " was invested, stormed and 
taken. Then followed weeks of massacre, pillage and 
burning, the details of which make the fall of Baghdad the 
most awful and frightful episode in history. Out of over 
two million inhabitants says Ibn Khaldun, one million 
six hundred thousand were put to the sword or otherwise 
perished, 2 including the khalif and every member of his 
family on whom hands could be laid. Palaces, mosques, 
and colleges were burned or destroyed after having been 
ransacked. Learned men, professors, literary men, and 
imams, were slaughtered as ruthlessly as whole libraries of 
books, the treasures of centuries, were committed to the 
flames or the Tigris. 3 " The loss suffered by Muslim 
learning/' says the late Professor E. G. Browne, " defies 
description and almost surpasses imagination : not only 
were thousands of priceless books utterly annihilated, but 
owing to the number of men of learning who perished or 
barely escaped with their lives, the very tradition of 
accurate scholarship and original research, so conspicuous 

1 Fakhri, 571. Howorth, op. cit., iii, 113, 117. 
1 The figures differ in the various accounts. 

Ibn Sa'id al MaghribI (d. 1274 or 1286) who was at Baghdad just 
before this, visited thirty-six libraries in the city. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 185 

in Arabic literature before this period, was almost des- 
troyed/ 11 So ended the Khalifate of Baghdad. 

We have now to turn our attention to other important 
centres of Arabian polity and culture, Al-Andalus and 
Egypt. 

In Al-Andalus, the arts, literature and science flourished 
with such brilliance that their light was reflected to all 
parts, not only of the world of Islam, but of Western 
Europe. At the opening of this period " the torch of 
science " says Sa'id ibn Ahmad (d. 1069) " shone brighter 
than ever," in Al-Andalus. The Greek sciences were 
especially studied. The fame of its people has been 
expressed in a panegyric of Ibn Ghalib (d. 1044) who likens 
them to the Indians " in their love of learning, as well as 
their assiduous cultivation of science/' and to the Greeks 
" in their knowledge of the physical and natural sciences. " a 
Ibn al-Hijari (d. 1194) says that during the reign of the 
Umayyads in Al-Andalus (eighth to eleventh century), 
" students from all parts of the world flocked ... to 
learn the sciences of which Cordova was the most noble 
repository, and to derive knowledge from the mouth of the 
doctors and 'ulamd' who swarmed in it." 3 

Al-Hakam II (961-76) was the khalif who succeeded the 
great 'Abd al-Rahmaii III. Like his predecessor, he was 
a liberal patron of culture. Being a zealous bibliophile he 
dispatched emissaries to Cairo, Baghdad, Damascus and 
other cities, to procure books, and in this way collected 
a library of some 600,000 volumes. 4 He sent 1,000 
pieces of gold to the author of the great Kitdb al-aghani, 
so as to be one of the first to obtain a copy of his magnum 
opus. 5 

Hisham II (976-1009) was a weakling who was ruled by 
his minister Al-Mansur and the theologians. While the 

1 Browne, Lit. Hist, of Persia, ii, 463. 

Curiously enough, this writer says that all this superiority of the 
Andalusians was due to planetary influence. According to him their 
musical gifts were due to Venus and their love of learning and science 
to Mercury. 

8 Al-Maqqari, Moh. Dyn., i, 30, 117-8, 140, and Appendix xl. 
4 The number given by Casiri (i, 38) is 600,000, but Al-Maqqarl 
(Moh. Dyn.) says 400,000. 

Al-Maqqarl, op. cit. t ii, 169. 



i86 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

wazw led his victorious armies against the Christians in 
the North, the theologians made war on heresy in Islam. 
The special aversion of the theologians was Greek science, 
and works on natural philosophy and astronomy especially 
were seized and destroyed. l The sciences actually fell into 
desuetude for a time on this account. 

After the death of Al-Mansur in 1002, the Praetorian 
guards became masters of the situation. These were 
Slavs (hence their name saqdliba) and Berbers, and 
precisely the same turn of affairs that happened to the 
Baghdad Khalifate now came to that of Cordova. In less 
than thirty years, no fewer than nine khalifs occupied the 
throne, some of them twice. The first of these puppet 
khalifs was Muhammad II al-Mahdi (1009-10). He gave 
offence to the orthodox by reason of his indulgence in 
music and wine. His palace resounded with a hundred 
lutes (iddri) and as many reed-pipes (mazdmlr). 2 Al- 
Mustakfi (1024-27) had a daughter Wallada who was a 
famous poetess and musician. The last of these puppet 
khalifs was Hisham III (1027-31), and on his fall the 
House of Umayya ceased in Al-Andalus. In a year or 
two Cordova became a republic. 

The land then became split up under numerous " Party 
Kings " (muluk al-tawaif), who set up courts at Malaga 
( Hammudids, 1016-57), Algeciras (Hammudids, 1039-58), 
Seville ('Abbadids, 1023-91), Granada (Zairids, 1012-90), 
Cordova (Jahwarids, 1031-68), Toledo (Dhu'l-Nunids, 
1035-85), Valencia ('Amirids, 1021-1085), Saragossa (Tuji- 
bids, 1019 ; Hudids, 1039-1141), Denia (Mujahids, 
1017-75) and others. " The cause of science and liter- 
ature " says Al-Shaqandi (d. 1231), "instead of losing, 
gained considerably " by the break-up of Al-Andalus into 
petty states. 3 These rulers " delighted to do honour to 
learning and belles lettres and made their courts the homes 
of poets and musicians." 4 

The 'Abbadids of Seville, who for a time ruled Cordova, 
were the most important of these kings. Al-Shaqandi 

1 Al-Maqqarl, Moh. Dyn., i, 141 

1 Dozy, Hist, des Mus. d'Espagne, iii, 284. 

Al-Maqqari, Moh. Dyn., i, 35. See also i, 37, 40, 42, 53, 67. 

*S. Lane-Poole, The Moors in Spain, 176. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 187 

avers that the 'Abbadids " showed a greater passion for 
literature than was even shown by the Hamdanids in 
Aleppo/' 1 and Seville had long been famed for its cultiva- 
tion of art and science. 2 Al-Mu'tamid (1068-91) the last 
'Abbadid ruler, says a contemporary poet Ibn al-Katta 
(b. 1041), made his court " the meeting-place of the learned 
. . . the resort of poets and literary men." 3 This 
monarch was a singer and a performer on the 'ud and 
his son, 'Ubaidallah al-Rashld, was also a cultured 
musician and poet who performed on both the 'iid and 
mizhar.* His inordinate passion for music offended his 
subjects. 5 The songs of the court poet 'Abd al-Jabbar 
ibn Hamdis, a Sicilian Arab, were the rage of the Sevillian 
musicians. 6 One of the 'Abbadids used to carry a copy 
of the great Kitab al-aghanl about with him on his 
itineraries. 7 According to Al-Shaqandi, Seville was 
famous for its manufacture of musical instruments, in 
which it had an export trade, 8 and Ibn Rushd (d. 1198) 
testifies that it was the centre of this industry. 8 

At Toledo, the splendour and extravagance of the 
entertainments of the Dhu'l-Nunids gave rise to the 
proverb, " Like a Dhu'l-Nunid banquet/' 10 It was this 
city that boasted of the celebrated musician Abu'l- 
Husain ibn Abi Ja'far al-Waqshi. The amir Yahya al- 
Ma'mun (d. 1074) fostered the study of the mathematical 
sciences, 11 and it was through the portals of Toledo that 
many of the Latin translations from the Arabic of the 
sciences found their way into Christian Europe. 12 

Other petty rulers were just as keen in their patronage 
of music. Indeed, the gallant Cid himself censured them 

1 Al-Maqqari, op. cit., i, 36. 

a Al-Maqqari, op. cit., i, 59. It was the home of science in Gothic 
days, i, 26. 

Al-Maqqar!, ii, 301. 

4 For music under the 'Abbadids, see Scriptorum Arabum loci de 
Abbadidis, edited by Dozy (1846-52), i, 394, 422 ; ii, 40, 62, 71. 

6 Al-Maqqarl, op. cit., ii, 254. 

His songs were published by Schiaparelli in his // Canzoniere di Ibn 
Hamdis (Rome, 1897). 

Hajjl Khalifa, i, 367. 

Al-Maqqari, Moh. Dyn., i, 58-9. Ibid., i, 42. 
10 Dozy, Hist, des Mus. d'Espagne, ii, 255. 

" Al-Maqqari, Moh. Dyn., i, 384. 

18 Raskins, Studies in Medieval Science, 12-13. 



i88 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

for dabbling so much with " wine, woman, and song." 1 
A certain Ahmad ibn Muhammad al-Yamanl testifies 
to the inordinate taste for music by the inhabitants of 
Malaga in 1015. He heard the sounds of the ( ud (lute), 
tunbur (pandore,) mizmdr (reed-pipe), and other instru- 
ments on every side. 2 Al-Shaqandi (d. 1231) remarks on 
the fondness of the people of Ubeda near Jaen for music 
and dancing, and the fame of this town for its dancing- 
girls. 3 Saragossa boasted of a great mathematician and 
music theorist in Abul-Fadl Hasday. 

In Al-Andalus, music and poetry belonged, not so much 
to a special class as in the East, but to the people at large. 
Zakariyya al-Qazwini (d. 1283) mentions in his Athdr 
al-bildd that at Shilb in Portugal almost every inhabitant 
displayed an interest in literature, and that one could 
find even ploughmen capable of improvising in verse. 4 

In the second half of the eleventh century, the 
Christians began to seriously threaten the Muslim states, 
and when Toledo fell in 1085, the Andalusians petitioned 
their co-religionists the Murawids of North Africa to 
extend their help. The latter entered Al-Andalus in 
1086 and defeated the Christian army at Zallaqa near 
Badajoz. Like all " protectors/' the Murawids had 
their price, and that was Al-Andalus. The petty king- 
doms were broken up and the whole land became part of 
the empire of Morocco. 

The new masters were fanatics, and with them the 
faqih (theologian) possessed an enormous influence. 
" Free thought became impossible," whilst " culture and 
science faded away." 5 Even the Ihyd 'ulum al-din of 
Al-Ghazall was interdicted. Poets and musicians were 
scarcely looked on with favour publicly. One of the great 
names however that stand out during this period is that 
of the celebrated Ibn Bajja the philosopher and music 
teacher, known in Western Europe as Avenpace. It is 

1 Pnmera crdnica general. (Nueva Biblioteca de Autores Espan. 
1906), i, 589. Quoted by Ribera. 

1 Hadlqat al-afrdh (Cairo Edit.) p. 127. 
Al-Maqqarl, Moh. Dyn., i, 54. 

* Al-Qazwini, Athar al-bildd (Wustenfeld Edit.), 364. 

Nicholson, Lit. Hist, of the Arabs, 431. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 189 

the life of Ibn Baj ja that shows us that the Murawids were 
not so averse to the fine arts after all. At any rate they 
kept their singing-girls as did their predecessors, as we 
know from a story told of the Murawid amir of Saragossa 
Ibn Tifalawit. 1 The Murawids were soon to find masters 
themselves. 

In 1130 a new power arose in North Africa. This was 
the Muwahhids, Attacking the Murawids in Morocco 
and Al-Andalus (1144-5) they practically exterminated 
them. The Muwahhids ruled Al-Andalus and North 
Africa for nearly a century. Like the Murawids, the 
Muwahhids were Berbers, but they were " far more 
enlightened and favourable to culture than the Murawids 
had been." 2 During their regime some of the greatest 
names of Arabian culture became world-famous, and 
among them, Ibn Tufail, Ibn Rushd (Averroes) Musa 
ibn Maimun (Maimonides), and Ibn Sab'in, all of whom 
however, were persecuted on account of their philosophical 
opinions. 

The Muwahhids eventually suffered the fate of their 
predecessors. In 1228, the Hafsids of Tunis claimed their 
independence, and by 1230, the Christians had driven the 
Muwahhids from Al-Andalus back to North Africa. The 
final blow to the Muwahhids came in 1269 when the 
Marinids of Morocco ousted them from their very strong- 
hold. The disastrous rout of the Muwahhids was not 
however, the end of the Arabs in Al-Andalus. Granada 
gave shelter to the surviving Arab population, and here 
the Nasrid dynasty (1232-1492) held the banner of Islam 
aloft against the Christians of the peninsula. 

Egypt, at the opening of this period, was ruled by the 
Ikhshidids (938-69), but in the latter year they were 
ousted by the Fatimid khalifs from the West. The new- 
comers removed their capital from Al-Mahdiyya near 
Tunis to Al-Qahira (Cairo) a new quarter of Fustat, which 
was soon to become the centre of Arabian culture for the 
Near East. The Fatimids, claiming descent from Fatima 
the daughter of the Prophet, assumed the title of khalif , 

1 Ibn Khaldun, Prol , iii, 426-7. 

Nicholson, Lit. Hist, of the Arabs, 432. Al-Marrakushl, 159, 170-5. 



A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

and were recognized as such by the Shi'a world of Islam, 
dispensing patents of regality to their spiritual subjects as 
far off as Delhi. 1 Naturally, a magnificent court was 
maintained at Cairo, where every effort was made to out- 
do the prestige of the Baghdad Khalifate. Art, science, 
and letters were promoted under their aegis, whilst music 
and musicians were encouraged with prodigality. 

Al-Mu'izz (953-75) was the first Fatimid khalif to rule 
in Egypt, and he is described as "an accomplished 
scholar, well versed in science and philosophy and a 
munificent patron of arts and learning/' 2 His son Tamim 
was an accomplished poet and like his father, a keen 
devotee to music. 3 During this reign the Fatimids 
extended their power to Syria and Al-Hijaz, completed 
the conquest of Sicily, and broke the power of the 
Qardmita (Carmathians). 

Al-'AzIz (975-96) accomplished the conquest of Syria 
and of a considerable part of Mesopotamia. The Fatimid 
empire now extended from the Euphrates to the Atlantic. 
The khalif 's court indulged in the most inordinate luxury 
and unheard-of splendour. 4 He founded the college at 
the Azhar, which had been built in the previous 
reign. 

Al-Hakim (996-1021) ascended the throne as a child 
under the tutelage of his Slav ustdd Barjawan. This 
tutor is recorded as having lavished too much attention 
upon musicians, and in this way neglected the proper 
attention to his ward. 6 After the assassination of 
Barjawan, the young khalif revealed himself a bigot and 
barbarian. He forbade all public amusements, and 
musicians were threatened with banishment if they dared 
follow their vocation. 6 At the same time he gave en- 
couragement to the historian and song collector Al- 
Musabbihi, and patronized the physicist and music 
theorist Ibn al-Haitham. The literature and science of 

1 Al-Bada'unI, i, 94, 310. fabaqdt al-nasirl, ii, 616. 
1 Syed Ameer Ah, A Short Hist, of the Saracens, 597. 

Ibn Khalhkan, Bwg. Diet., iii, 494. 

4 Wustenfeld, Gesch. der Fat.-Chal., 162. S. Lane-Poole, A Hist, 
of Egypt in the Middle Ages, 120-3. 

S. Lane-Poole, op. cit., 125. 

Ibn Khalhkan, Biog. Diet., iii, 451. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 191 

music were not counted among the maldhim the same way 
as " listening to music " was. He built colleges and 
observatories in both Egypt and Syria, including 
the famous Ddr al-hikma (Hall of Science), erected 
in 1005. 

Al-Zahir (1021-36), unlike his father, cultivated an 
immoderate taste for the maldhi or forbidden pleasures. 
He was an accomplished amateur in music and spent 
fabulous sums of money on his female singers. 1 He 
became completely engrossed in a sybaritic life, in which 
" his love of music and dancers was combined with a 
savage cruelty/' 2 

Al-Mustansir (1036-94) was similarly appassioned for 
musicians and singing-girls, and an estate near the Nile 
known as the Ard al-tabbdla (Demesne of the Female 
Drummer) was a gift to a favourite singing-girl. 3 He 
ignored many of the precepts of Islam, and his wazir 
Al-Yazuri had pictures painted of dancing-girls. 4 The 
khalif had a pavilion with a pond of wine constructed in 
imitation of the Zamzam building and well at Mecca. 
Here he passed his hours drinking and feasting to the 
music of stringed instruments and singers, saying, 
" This is pleasanter than staring at a black stone, listening 
to the drone of the mu'adhdhin, and drinking bad water ! " 5 
It was during this reign that the Persian traveller Nasir-i 
Khusrau visited Egypt and wrote so enthusiastically 
about the Fatimid splendour, including its military 
music. 6 Of all the Fatimid khalifs, Al-Mustansir was the 
richest, and his reign is certainly the most splendid, in 
spite of anarchy, famine, and pestilence. The inventory 
of his treasures, as recorded by Al-Maqrizi, reads, as 
Stanley Lane-Poole says, 7 " like a fable in The Thousand 



1 Al-Maqrlzl, Al-Mawd'i?, 355. 

S. Lane-Poole, op. cit. t 136. 

8 Ibid., 139. Al-Maqrizi, op. cit., 338. 
4 Ibid., in. 

S. Lane-Poole, op. cit., 145. This refers to the sacred stone built 
into the wall of the Ka'ba at Mecca, and the Zamzam well opposite it, 
whose waters the pilgrims drink. The mu'adhdhin is he who chants the 
call (adhdn) to prayer. 

Nasir-i Khusrau, Safar ndma (Paris, 1 88 1), pp. 43, 46, 47. 
7 S. Lane-Poole, op. cit., 147. 



192 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

and One Nights." His library housed over 100,000 
volumes. 1 

Al-Musta'H (1094-1101) and Al-Amir (1101-1131) were 
the next khalifs. The latter, like^most of his predecessors, 
was addicted to pleasure and music. He patronized 
Abu'1-Salt Umayya the scientist, composer, and music 
theorist. During this period the real decline of the 
Fatimid Khalif ate asserted itself. The loss of Syria and 
Palestine to the Crusaders was a serious blow to its 
prestige. 

Al-Hafiz (1131-49) was deeply interested in astrology, 2 
and it was for him that a court physician made a special 
drum whose notes were supposed to cure a malady from 
which he suffered. It was constructed of seven different 
metals " welded at the exact moment when the southing 
of each of the seven planets promised fortunate results." 3 
This instrument was preserved in the palace until the time 
of Salah al-DIn when it was accidentally broken by one 
of his soldiers. 4 

Al-Zafir (1149-54) is blamed for having given more 
attention to music than to arms and politics. 5 A copy 
of the great Kitdb al-aghdm that was made for this 
monarch is still preserved. 

Under the next two khalifs, Al-Fa'iz (1154-60) and 
Al-'Aclid (1160-71), the Fatimid dynasty was hurried to 
its close. The end came when the two Zangid generals 
Shirkuh and Salah al-Din entered the capital in 1169. 
Two years later the last of the Fatimid khalifs died, and 
Salah al-Din better known as Saladin, the first of the 
Ayyubids, became the ruler of Egypt. 

1 Ibid., 149. Some writers put the total of this Khalif ate library at 
two million books. It was pillaged during his reign by the Turkish 
soldiery, yet when Salah al-Din took control in 1171, there were still 
120,000 volumes in the khalifs library. They eventually passed into the 
possession of the Fadihyya college. It is said that this library con- 
tained 6,500 works on the quadnvium alone. See the figures given in 
the Journal Asiatique, July, 1838, p. 55 et scq., Encyclopedia of Islam, 
ii, 1045, and Lcclerc, Histowe de la Mtdecine arabe, i, 583. 

1 Al-Maqrizi, Al-Mawd'iz, 357. 

8 This was prompted by the astro-musical theories which held a place 
in therapeutics. Sec my brochure The Influence of Music : From Arabic 
Sources (1926). 

4 S. Lane-Poole, op. cit., 169. 

*Ibid., 171. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 193 

Although the Fatimid period is one of the most brilliant 
for intellectual culture in Arabian history, and in science 
alone the Ddr al-hikma (Hall of Science) and such names as 
Ishaq al-Isra'ili, Ibn Ridwan, and Ibn al-Haitham, 
known to Western Europe as Isaac Israeli, Rodoam, and 
Alhazen, enable us to appreciate to some extent what this 
amounts to, yet it is in the fine arts probably that their 
great patronage was most fruitful. Not only in their 
architecture but in their encouragement of the industrial 
arts, the Fatimids have left a glorious record. 

Under the Ayyubids (1171-1250), Egypt returned to 
the Sunni or Orthodox faith, and the Shl'a creed was 
tabooed. The name of the 'Abbasid khalif of Baghdad 
was re-inserted in the khutba 1 in place of that of the 
Fatimid, and in return the khalif created Salah al-Din a 
sultan. The Ayyubids extended their dominions to 
Mesopotamia, Syria, Palestine, Tripoli, and Al-Yaman, 
and dynasties were set up in Mesopotamia (1200-44), 
Damascus (1186-1260), Aleppo (1186-1260), Kama (1178- 
1341), Hims (1178-1262), and Al-Yaman (1173-1228). 

Music and the arts in general flourished under these 
sultans. Salah al-Din (1171-93) and Al-'Aziz (1193-98) 
were the patrons of scholars. The famous Musa ibn 
Maimun was employed by them, and the scientists and 
music theorists Abu Zakariyya al-Bayasi and Abu Nasr 
ibn al-Matran were favoured. " Of the cultivated tastes " 
of 'Adil (1199-1218), Al-Kamil (1218-38), and Al-Salih 
(1240-49), says Stanley Lane-Poole, " we have contem- 
porary evidence from Ibn Khallikan, Ibn al-Athir, and 
Baha' al-Din Zuhair." 2 Although Al-Ashraf Musa (1250- 
52) was named in the khutba, the rule of the Ayyubids in 
Egypt ended with Turanshah (1249-50), when the 
Turkish Bahri Mamluks took the reins of government. 

Under the Ayyubids a new phase of culture is said to 
have been developed, which, so far as the court and 
society is concerned, is claimed to have been due in some 

1 The Friday oration delivered in the mosque. It comprises praise 
to Allah, blessing on the Prophet and his descendants, and prayer for 
the Khalif. 

' S. Lane-Poole, op. cit. f 240. 



194 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

respects to Turkish ideas. 1 How music was affected we 
shall see later. 

n 

In spite of political adversity in both the East and 
West, the Muslim states still held their own in the battle 
throng, in art, in science, and in philosophy. One has 
but to mention such names as Salah al-DIn (Saladin), the 
Alcazar at Seville, Ibn Sina (Avicenna), and Ibn Rushd 
(Averroes), and the truth of this is as palpable as the 
noon-day sun. No serious change had come to the social 
life of the Arab in these days of " the fall." Music was 
still " the one thing needful " where joy was concerned, 
and was as fully appreciated as ever it had been, although, 
strange to say, the stricter Muslims were even more 
insistent on its condemnation. Indeed, the polemical 
writings concerned with the lawfulness of music help us 
to understand the temper of the age, for it would seem 
that this descanting on the " sin of listening," just as much 
as the pessimistic poetry of the period, was nurtured, as 
much by the introspective state of minds created by the 
political events as anything else. The curious point 
about this debate is that, after Al-Ghazali (d. mi), music 
came to play an important part in the dervish (darwish) 
and marabout (murabit) fraternities. The cue for this had 
been given by suft teaching and practice. 2 

We have already seen how the opposition to music 
arose, and a landmark in the controversy is the Dhamm 
al-maldhi (Disapprobation of Musical Instruments) of 
Ibn Abi'l Dunya (d. 894). Since the Hanbali governance, 
the discussion seems to have become more acute in 
Al-'Iraq, and by the twelfth century a literature specially 
devoted to this subject abounded. The legal position was 
regularized by such authoritative writers as the Shafi'i 
Al-Mawardi (d. 1058) and the Hanafi Al-Marghmani 
(d. 1197) whose Hiddya became the most widely read 
compend of Muslim law. 3 Opinions however, were to a 

1 Encyclopedia of Islam, i, 223. 
See Chapter II, p. 35. 

1 Al-Mawardf s works however, were not published during his life- 
time. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 195 

great extent controlled by the teaching of the great 
philosopher Al-Ghazali (d. mi). As Principal of the 
Nizamiyya colleges at Baghdad and Nisapur, he exercised 
an enormous influence, and his defence of music (al-samd') 
in his monumental Ihyd 'ulum al-dm (Revivification of 
the Religious Sciences), so widely read, must have served 
as a balm to the consciences of many on this subject. 1 
His brother who succeeded him as Principal of the 
Nizamiyya college at Baghdad, Abul-Futuh Majd al- 
Din Ahmad ibn Muhammad ibn Muhammad al-Tusi, was 
also a strong champion of music, which is testified by his 
Kitab biwdriq al-asmd' preserved at the Staatsbibliothek at 
Berlin. 2 Another writer of the period in Al-'Iraq, 
'Abd al-Latif al-Baghdadi (d. 1232), also wrote a Kitab 
al-samd' * 

In Syria, we see the problem handled by Taj al-DIn 
al-Sarkhadi (d. 1275), a Hanafi professor at the Nuriyyi 
college at Damascus, who wrote a Tashmf al-asmd' 
(Condemnation of Listening to Music), and by the 
Shafi'i mufti 'Abd al-Rahman ibn Ibrahim al-Firkah (d. 
1291), the author of a Kashf al-qind' fl hall al-samd 1 
(Lifting the Veil in the Solution of Listening to 
Music). 4 

In the West, as early as the tenth century, we have seen 
Ibn 'Abd Rabbihi reproving those who argued that listen- 
ing to music was sinful. 5 At the same time there were 
legists who were influencing opinion that music was to be 
condemned. 6 By the close of the eleventh century, the 
fanatical Murawids were masters in the land, and the 
pleadings of the partisans of al-samd' were hushed, the 
Ihyd 'ulum al-dm of Al-Ghazali being among the works 
interdicted. By the twelfth century we have Abu Bakr 
ibn al-'Arabi (d. 1151), a celebrated qddtoi Seville, defend- 

1 The text of the Ihyd was issued at Cairo in the year A.H. 1326. The 
7th section of the 2nd rub' , which deals with the question under dis- 
cussion, was translated by Professor D. B Macdonald in the Journal of 
the P oval Asiatic Society (1901-2) under the title of " Emotional Religion 
in Islam as Affected by Music and Singing." 

Ahlwardt, Vcrz., No. 5505. 
Ibid., No. 5536, 8. 

4 Ahlwardt, Verz., No. 5536, 9. 

'Iqd al-farld, in, 176. 

o Aljoxani, Histona de los Jueces de CGrdoba, 255. 



196 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

ing music against the strictures of the extremists. 1 A 
townsman of his, Ahmad ibn Muhammad al-Ishbili 
(d. 1253) was the author of a Kitab al-samd' wa ahkdmuhu 
(Book of Listening to Music and its Ordinances). 2 

The 'ulamd* orfuqaha (legists) could rail as they pleased, 
for it made little difference in the long run. The tabl 
khdna (military band) still cheered the soldiers ; the 
mughanni (professional musician) still found unlimited 
patronage in public and private festivities ; the qaina 
(singing-girl) was yet an adornment of the harim ; and 
the darwish (dervish) was beginning to regulate his 
dhikr (ritual) by means of music. The poets still sang 
in praise of music, musicians, and musical instruments. 3 
Perhaps the musicians themselves did not hold quite 
the same social position that we see them enjoying in the 
great Kitab al-aghdni or in the earlier stories of the A If 
laila wa laila, but they were still people of importance. 
Even the Ikhwan al-Safa/, Ibn Sina and Ibn Zaila, refer 
their readers to the rules of the practitioners when they 
consider it necessary. The important position of Safi 
al-DIn 'Abd al-Mu'min at the Baghdad court is, perhaps, 
no criterion, since he was first of all the court librarian and 
scribe, but the fact that eminent scientists and men of 
letters like Abu'1-Salt Umayya, Ibn Bajja, Abul-Hakam 
al-Bahili, and Abul-Majd Muhammad ibn Abfl-Hakam 
all boasted of being performers on the 'ud (lute) shows that 
the art of music was still "respectable." There were of 
course, certain reasons besides art and mere diversion that 
made music necessary, for as one of the characters says in 
the Alf laila wa laila* " To some people music is meat, 
and to others medicine." 

The doctrine of the " influence of music " was given a 
fresh lease of life by contact with the Greek notions of the 
ethos. As for the doctrine of the Harmony of the Spheres, 
the Ikhwan al-Safa' say, " It is clear that to the move- 

1 Ibn al-'Arabl's work does not appear to have come down to us, but 
it is freely quoted in the Kitab al-imta 1 wal-mtifa' in the National 
Library at Madrid (Robles, Catdlogo, No. 603.). 

1 Ahlwardt, Verz., No. 5536, 7. 

Al-Nuwairl, Nihayat al-arab, v, 113-22, 

* Alf laila wa laila, ii, 87. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 197 

ment of the spheres and stars are notes (naghamdt) and 
melodies (alhan)" In this doctrine was found the 
" first cause " for all music in the world of " generation 
and corruption." They taught that " the temperaments 
of the body are of many varieties, and the animal natures 
of many kinds. And to every temperament and every 
nature is a note resembling it and a melody befitting it. 11 
For that reason, music was employed in the hospitals 
because " it lightened the pain of disease and sickness 
from the afflicted/' 1 Every genre (jins) and tone 
(tamdid) in music, as well as every melodic and rhythmic 
mode had its particular ethical value. 2 Ibn Sina says 
that certain modes should be allocated to particular 
periods of the day and night. He says, " It behoves 
that the musician should tune the time of the false dawn 
(subh al-kddhib) with the [mode] Rahawi,, and the time of 
the true dawn (subh al-sddiq) with the Husain, and the 
rising of the sun with the Rdst, and the time of the fore- 
noon (duhd) with the Busalik* ; and the time of midday 
(nisf al-nahdr) with the Zankuld, and the time of noon (zuhr) 
with the 'Ushshdq, and between the prayers with the 
Hijdz, and the time of the afternoon (asr) with the 'Iraq, 
and the time of sunset (ghurub) with the Isfahan, and the 
time of nightfall (maghrib) with the Nawd, and after the 
evening prayer ( { asha) with the Buzurk, and the time of 
sleep with the Mukhdlif (== Ztrdfkand)."* 

His disciple Al-Husain ibn Zaila devotes considerable 
attention to the ethical aspect of this question. 5 Safi 
al-DIn 'Abd al-Mu'min says that " every mode (shadd) 
has an influence on the soul, only that it is of different 
kinds. Some influence courage and simplicity, and these 
are three, the 'Ushshdq, Abu Salik, and Nawd. . . . 
And as for the Rdst, Nauruz, 'Iraq, and Isfahan, 
then they pacify the soul with a pleasant pacification, 
delightful. And as for the Buzurk, Rdhawi, Zirdfkand, 

i Ikhwan al-Safa' (Bombay Edit.), i, 87, 92, 100-1. 
Mafatlh al-'ulum, p. 243-4. 

=Abu Sallk. 

British Museum MS., Or. 2361, fol 201 v. 

British Museum MS., Or. 2361, fol. 226 v. 



igS A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

Zankula, Husaini, and Hijdzi, they influence grief, 
lassitude." 1 

After the period covered by the great Kitdb al-aghdm, 
which takes us to the opening of the tenth century, we 
have little information concerning the type of verse used 
in the vocal music of these days, the works of writers of 
the same class as Abu'l-Faraj al-Isfahani having been 
lost. The names of four important eleventh to thirteenth 
century poets, whose verses were set to music, have 
been preserved. They are Al-Bayadl (d. 1076), Ibn 
Hamdis (d. 1132) of Seville, Abu 'Abdallah al-Abla 
(d. ca. 1138) of Baghdad, and Taqi al-Din al-Saruqi 
(d. 1294) of Cairo. In the British Museum there is a MS. 
dating from the thirteenth century, which contains the 
words of songs, each superscribed with the name of the 
mode in which it was sung. 2 From Al-Andalus and North 
Africa there have come down to us the words of the 
classical naubdt, even though the music may be ques- 
tioned. 3 It was in Al-Andalus that the popular verse- 
forms the zajal and muwashshah came. These be- 
came the more general vehicles for songs. 4 Popular 
verse, when set to music caught the public taste, as we 
know from Diya' al-Dinlbn al-Athir (d. 1239). 5 

' Abd al-Qadir ibn Ghaibi (d. 1435) who deals at length 
with the various art-forms that were current in his day 
tells us that in olden days the recognized vocal forms were 
the nauba, nashid, and bastt. The last-named was a 
qit'a which had to be set to one of the thaqil rhythms. 6 

As of old, melodies could be either set to rhythm $qd f ) 
or not. The technical terms for these two features were 
nazm al-naghamdt (arrangement of the notes) and nashr 
al-naghamdt (dispersion of the notes). 

Among the melodies that were set to the rhythmic 
modes were those known as the dastdndt (sing, dastdn), 7 

1 Kitdb al-adwdr, fasl xiv. For further information on this question 
see my brochure The Influence of Music . From Arabic Sources. 

* British Museum MS., Or. 136, fols. 40-55 v. 

* Majmu' al-aghanl wa'l-alhdn. (Algiers, 1904). vw 

* Ibn Khaldun, Prol., iii, 422, 436, 441. Hartmann, Das Muwassah. 
Schack, Poesie und Kunst der Araber in Spanien und Sizilien. 

* Al-mathal al-sd'ir (Bulaq, A. H., 1282), 46. 

* British Museum MS., Or. 2361, fol. 215 v. ' Ibid., fol. 233 



THE 'ABBASIDS 199 

the origin of which has been ascribed to Barbad the min- 
strel of the Sasanian monarch Khusrau Parwiz (d. 628). l 
Eight rhythmic modes are given by Ibn Sina 2 and Al-Husain 
ibn Zaila, 3 and they are quoted not only on the authority 
of Al-Kindi and Al-Farabi, but also according to the 
contemporary practitioners. Agreement between them 
is lacking, and it is difficult even to make them conform 
to the rules of the Mafdtth al-ulum and the Ikhwan al- 
Safa'. In the days of Safi al-Din ' Abd al-Mu'min only 
six of these rhythmic modes were current. This author 
informs us that the Persians had several rhythmic modes 
that were unknown to the Arabs, and vice versa.* In 
Al-Andalus, according to Ibn Sida (d. 1066) the rhythmic 
modes were similar (at least in name) to the Eastern 
school. 5 As for the songs and instrumental pieces that 
were not set to rhythm, they were known by the general 
name of rdwism (sic). 6 The ghazal or love-song was sung 
in this way in the thirteenth century, whilst the nashid 
exhibited both the rhythmical and unrhythmical features. 7 
The most important class of composition appears to 
have been the nauba (pi. naubdf). We have reference to 
this as early as the ninth century, 8 although we know 
little of its character. Apparently it was a suite, i.e., a 
number of movements played in succession (suite) hence 
the term. It was chamber music and must not be con- 
fused with the nauba of the tabl khdna or military band. 
In the Alf laila wa laila we read of an entire nauba being 
performed, and also a portion (the ddrij) of a nauba, 9 but 
we cannot be sure of the dates of these stories. It is not 
until the time of 'Abd al-Qadir ibn Ghaibi (d. 1435) that 
we get any reliable particulars concerning the nauba. 
According to this virtuoso and theorist the nauba was of 
ancient origin, and in his day it comprised four move- 

1 Mafdtlh al-ulum, p. 238. Cf. ante p. 49. 

Al-shifa' t maqala v. 

British Museum MS., Or. 2361, fol. 227 et seq. 

Bodleian MS., March 115, fol. 52. British Museum MS. Or. 135, 
fol. 37 v. 

Kitab al-mukhassas (Bulaq edit ), xii. i, n. 

British Museum MS., Or. 2361, fol. 233. 
'Ibid., fol 215. 

See ante p. 153. 

Alf laila wa laila (Macnaghten edit.), ii, 54, 87 ; iv f 183. 



200 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

merits (qita'}, called the qaul, ghazal, tar ana, and furu 
ddsht. But in the year 1379, Ibn Ghaibi, whilst at the 
court of the Jalayrid sultan of Al-'Iraq, Jalal al-Din al- 
IJusain, introduced a fifth movement which he named the 
mustazdd. 1 That the ancient nauba only contained four 
movements is specifically mentioned. 

In Al-Andalus the nauba received special attention, 
every mode being used by the composers, hence the mis- 
nomer, " the twenty-four naubdt."* The Andalusian 
nauba, according to modern writers, had five distinct 
movements quite irrespective of a daira or vocal prelude, 
a mustakhbir or instrumental prelude, and a tushiya or 
overture. These five movements, each of which is 
preceded by an introductory karsi, are called the masdar, 
bataih, darj, insiraf, and khalas (or mukhlas). 3 The 
nauba was the classical type of Andalusian music. 4 

In the science of music, save for two Persian docu- 
ments the Bahjat al-nih of 'Abd al-Mu'min ibn Safl 
al-Dln, 5 and the Jami' al-ulum of Fakhr al-Dln al-Razi, 6 
all the works that we know of during this period are in 
Arabic. This was still the language of science and of 
polite society throughout Islamic lands, from Afghanistan 
to Al-Andalus, and so, whatever theoretical treatises on 
music were studied, had to be read for the most part in the 
language of the Qur'dn. Of course, the scientific (mathe- 

1 Bodleian MS. t fol. 95 et seq. British Museum MS., Or. 2361, fol. 
215 v. et seq. 

* Rafael Mitjana, Le monde oriental (1906), p. 215. Lavignac's 
Encyclopedic de la musique, v, p. 2846. 

Majmu 1 al-aghanl wa'l-alhan (Algiers, 1904). See also Dolphin et 
Guin, Notes sur la poesie et la musique arabes, p. 63 et seq. 

4 The examples of the nauba slka and nauba jarka given in the first- 
named work cannot be earlier than the i6th century, and they are not 
Andalusian. 

'The author of the Bahjat al-ruh (Bodleian Library, Ouseley, 117) 
is 'Abd al Mu'mm ibn Safl al-Dln' ibn 'Izz al-Dln Muhyl al-Dln ibn 
Ni'mat ibn Qabus Washingir Jurjani. The work appears to have been 
written in Afghanistan during the reign of Muhammad Ghurl, Mu'izz 
al-Dln (1173-1206). The work quotes both Greek and native author- 
ities, Plato, Hermes, Fakhr al-Dln Ta'us Marwl, and Diya' al-Dln 
Muhammad Yusuf. 

Fakhr al-Dln al-Razi (1149-1209) was born at Raiy and resided in 
Khurasan, Khwanzm, and Transoxiana, dying at Herat. The Khwarizml 
shah, 'Ala' al-Dln, for whom he wrote his Jami' al-'ulum, accorded him 
high honours. There are two copies of this latter work in the British 
Museum (Or. 2972, and Or. 3308). 



THE 'ABBASIDS 201 

matical) side of Arabian theory was derived from the 
Greeks of old as we have seen, yet the practical art always 
had reference to purely Arabian models. Even Ibn 
Sina and Al-Husain ibn Zaila, both of whom were pro- 
bably Iranians (by birth certainly), register Arabian 
methods in dealing with the practical art. 

In Al-'Iraq and the East up to the first half of the 
eleventh century we have ample information concerning 
the state of both the science and the practical art of music 
in the works of Abu'1-Wafa' al-Buzjam, the Ikhwan 
al-Safa', Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Khwarizmi, Ibn Sina, 
and Al-Husain ibn Zaila, all of which, save that of the 
first-named, have come down to us. In Egypt, Ibn 
al-Haitham was the representative theorist, although his 
works have perished, whilst in Al-Andalus, the interest 
of Al-MajritI in the treatises of the Ikhwan al-Safa', 
enables us to gauge the opinions of the Western theorists. 

The second half of the eleventh century is almost 
sterile of music theorists. In Al-'Iraq and the East, 
this may be accounted for by the Saljuqid conquests, 
which probably retarded intellectual activities for a time. 
In Al-Andalus, the fall of the House of Umayya, and the 
relegation of Cordova to provinciality, may also explain 
the gap in the West. 

The twelfth century, however, opens brilliantly with 
Ibn Baj ja in Al-Andalus, and he is followed by Muhammad 
ibn al-Haddad, Ibn Sab'In, and Muhammad ibn Ahmad 
al-Raquti. In Egypt and Syria several important names 
occur, and among them : Abu'1-Salt Umayya, Abul- 
Majd ibn Abfl-Hakam, Kamal al-DIn ibn Man'a, and 
'Alam al-Din Qaisar. In Al-'Iraq we have Ibn al-Naqqash, 
Abu'l-Hakam al-Bahili and Safi al-Din 'Abd al-Mu'min. 
Unfortunately, with the exception of two treatises by 
the last-named, no works of any writer after Al-Husain 
ibn Zaila, have been spared for us. 1 

By this time the Arabs were able to delve deeper still 
into the treatises of the Greeks of old. A new school of 
translators had also appeared in Yahya ibn 'Adi (d. 975), 

1 A work by Ibn Sab'In has indeed, been preserved, but it is in private 
hands and not accessible. 



202 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

'Isa ibn Zar'a (d. 1007), and others. The Ikhwan al-Safa' 
reveal themselves as thorough-going Aristotelians in 
philosophy. In music, whilst they follow Euklid and 
Nikomachos so far as mathematics is concerned, they deal 
with the practical art, in most respects, just as they found 
it. Their contribution to the question of sound is certainly 
an advance on the Greeks. 1 The Mafdtlh al j ulum of 
Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Khwarizmi (tenth cent.) is of con- 
siderable value because it helps us with precise definitions. 
Here, too, we get a marked influence from the Greek writers. 

With Ibn Sina (d. 1037) we are introduced to a theorist 
who is profoundly interested in Greek theory, and 
especially in Euklid. His biographers even claim that 
he dealt with questions that had been neglected by the 
Greeks. As valuable as this part of both the Shifa' 
and Najdt may be, it is really of subsidiary importance 
to what he has preserved for us of the practical musical 
art of the eleventh century. Ibn al-Haitham (d. 1039) 
was also interested in Euklid (or Pseudo-Euklid) and 
wrote commentaries on the two treatises on music that 
are attributed to the latter. Ibn Zaila (d. 1048), a disciple 
of Ibn Sina, follows his master rather slavishly in many 
respects, although in some cases his information regarding 
the practical art is additional to that recorded by Ibn Sina. 

After Ibn Zaila, as already remarked, we have a blank 
of two centuries so far as theoretical documents are 
concerned. Nothing has been spared us from the East 
until we reach the thirteenth century in the works of 
Safi al-DIn 'Abd al-Mu'min (d. 1294). This author, 
says the late Professor Collangettes, " n'y invoque 
Tautorite ni des Grecs ni des Persans. II pretend bien 
faire ceuvre purement arabe. Ce qui n'empeche pas 
les mots persans d'y figurer k tout instant, surtout pour 
la designation des modes. On s'est degage de Tinfluence 
grecque, mais pour subir celle de la Perse. Quels que 
soient du reste les elements de ce style composite, Tceuvre 
finale est sans contredit Texpression de Tart arabe au 
XHIe sidcle." 2 

1 See my Facts for the Arabian Musical Influence, appendix 33. 
Journal Asiatique, Nov.-Dec., 1904, p. 379. 




t.*Ji*&J &)&.%&. 

, " r- -- \ 

i ;. ' , / i / t* ' r\ o / * / 

.-. ^ ^ -4^ uj>. ^V->of-> 

Ata* 

, . I'i " 



t <- ' f ' H 
ir r M 1 1 



MUSICAL NOTATION. 

From the " Kitab al-adwar" of Safi al-Dln 'Abel al-Mu'min 
(d. 1294). 



THE 'ABBASIDS 203 

The influence of this virtuoso and savant was far-reach- 
ing. His " authority " is quoted by most of the later 
theorists, for as Hajji Khalifa says, he is one of those 
"taking the front rank" in this question. 1 Qutb al- 
Din al-Shirazi (d. 1310), Muhammad ibn Mahmud al- 
Amull (fourteenth cent.), the author of the Kanz al- 
tuhaf (fourteenth cent.), ' Abd al-Qadir ibn Ghaibi (d. 1453), 
Muhammad ibn 'Abd al-Hamid al-Ladhiql (fifteenth 
cent.), and the author of the Muhammad ibn Miirdd 
MS. (fifteenth cent.), all prostrate themselves before the 
authority of Safi al-Dln 'Abd al-Mu'min, even when 
they have to disagree with him. 

A notation has already been referred to as being used 
by both the theorists and the practitioners. 2 The idea 
was borrowed from the Greeks. It is used or mentioned 
by both Ibn Sina and Ibn Zaila. By the time of Safi 
al-Din 'Abd al-Mu'min we find it being used for recording 
melodies. 3 

We know from Ibn Sina (d. 1037) that there were 
twelve principal modes, some of them bearing Persian 
names. 4 The old modes which had been named after 
the fingers or asdbi', had in time become known by more 
fanciful names, and others of a more complex nature, 
due to fresh scales, Zalzalian and Persian, had been 
added. These latter, as we know from the Shifd' of 
Ibn Sina, were very popular, especially two named 
Isfahan and SalmakL 5 Here the modes are referred to 
under the generic name of the jamd'dt al-mashhura 
(sing, jama' a " assembly"). By the time of Safi al-Din 
'Abd al-Mu'min (d. 1294), these principal modes were 
called the maqdmdt (sing, maqdma}. There were also six 
secondary modes called awdzdt (sing, awdz), which are 
stated to be of later origin than the principal modes. 6 

1 Hajji Khalifa, vi, 255. 

See ante p. 108 

1 See my Facts for the Arabian Musical Influence, chap. vi. 

4 British Museum MS., Or. 2361, fol. 201 v. 

India Office MS., No. 1811, fol 174. We must not conclude from 
these names that Persian modes were favoured rather than Arabian. 
Tn the Gulistan of Sa'dl (d. 1292) Sifahan ( Isfahan) and Hijaz are 
mentioned as though they were the commonly pei formed modes. 

9 Bodleian MS. t Marsh, 521, fol. 171. 



204 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

How far the branch modes named shu'ab (sing, shu'ba) 
or furu' (sing, far'), which later became so popular, 1 
were practised by the Arabs at this period, we have no 
evidence, in spite of their appearance in the Persian 
Bahjat al-ruh, 2 the Durrat al-tdj of Al-Shirazi (1236-1310), 3 
and elsewhere. 4 Here are the names of the maqdmdt 
and awdzdt according to ,the Kitdb al-adwdr of Safi 
al-Din 'Abd al-Mu'min 5 : 

MAQAMAT. 'Ushshdq, Nawd, Abu Sattk, Rdst, 'Iraq, 
Zirdfkand, Buzurk, Zankula, Rdhawi* Husaini, 
and Hijdzl. 

AWAZAT. Kuwdsht, Karddniyya, Nauruz, Salmak, 
Maya, and Shahndz. 

In Al-Andalus and North Africa the modal system 
appears to have been different from that practised in 
the East. We have little information that enables us 
to form an opinion concerning its origin, but if contem- 
porary nomenclature and modern practice can tell us 
anything it would appear to have been of indigenous 
growth. According to the Ma'rifat al-naghamdt al- 
thamdn treatise, 7 there were four principal modes (usul), 
viz., DU, Zaiddn, Mazmum, and Maya. From these 
were derived a number of branch modes (furu') as follows : 

DIL. Ramal al-dil t 'Iraq al-'arab, Mujannab al-dil, 

Rasd al-dtt, and Istihldl al-dtt. 8 
Z AID AN. Hijdzal-kabw, Hijdz al-mashriql, 'Ushshdq, 

Hisdr, Isbahdn, and Zaurankand (sic.). 
MAZM UM.Gharibatal-husain, Mashriqi,and Hamddn. 

1 Ibn Ghaibi, Bodleian MS., Marsh, 282, fol. 41. British Museum 
MS., Or. 2361, fol. 198 v. 

Bodleian MS., Ouseley, 117, fol. 7 v. 

British Museum MS., Add. 7694. 

4 Bodleian MS., March, 521, fol. 171, and marginal notes in British 
Museum MS , Or. 136, fol. 21. 

British Museum MS., Or. 136. For a critical account of the scales 
of these modes see my Facts Joy the Arabian Musical Influence, Appendix 
49. The names given by Carra de Vaux in his Traiti des rapports 
musicaux, p. 62, do not agree with those in the MSS. consulted by the 
present writer. 

Also written Rahawl. 

Madrid MS., No. 334 (2). See also 334 (3). 

Six branch modes are mentioned but only five are named in the 
text. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 205 

MAYA. Ramal al-maya, Inqildb al-ramal, Husain, 
and Rasd. 

There was also another principal mode called the 
Gharibat al-muharra, but this had no branch modes. 
In all there were twenty-four modes. 

Notwithstanding the fairly considerable Persian nomen- 
clature that obtained in Arabian music we must not too 
hastily assume that it was Persian music that prevailed. 
On the contrary we know from the Ikhwan al-Safa' 
that different types of music were to be found in the two 
countries. The Ikhwan say, " Consider each nation, 
and the melodies (alhdn) and modes [or notes] (naghamdt) 
which they enjoy and are pleased with, which others 
do not enjoy nor are pleased with, for example, the music 
of the Dailamites, the Turks, the Arabs, the Kurds, the 
Armenians, the Ethiopians, the Persians, the Byzantines, 
and other nations who differ in language, nature, morals 
and customs/' 1 In another place they say concerning 
the rhythmic modes (iqd'dt), " These are the eight kinds 
(ajnds) which, as we have said, are a basic principle and 
are canons to the music (ghind') and melodies (alhdn) 
of the Arabs. And as for other people like the 
Persians, Byzantines, and Greeks, there are to their 
melodies and music other canons, different from these." 2 
Ibn Zaila also refers specifically to melodies known as the 
dastdndt of Khurasan and Isfahan which were alien to 
Arabian practice. 3 In the time of Safi al-DIn 'Abd 
al-Mu'min, as already remarked, the rhythmic modes of 
the Arabs and Persians were different, although the 
Persians were singing the nauba in Arabic as late as the 
fifteenth century. 4 

As for the scale, the Mafdtih al-ulum shows the 
Pythagorean system in use, with the addition of both the 
Zalzalian and Persian systems which have already been 
adverted to. 5 The Ikhwan al-Safa' only refer to the 

1 Ikhwan al-Safa', i, 92-3. 

Ibid., i, 116. 

British Museum MS., Or, 2361, fols. 232 v, 233. 
Bodleian MS., Marsh, 282, fol. 95. 

Mafdtlfr al-'ulum, 238-9. 



206 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

Pythagorean system. 1 Ibn Sma and Ibn Zaila demon- 
strate that the practitioners used both the Zalzalian and 
Pythagorean scales, although they refer to the latter 
as the " Old Persian " system. 2 

By the time of Safi al-Din 'Abd al-Mu'min (d. 1294) 
a new scale had been adopted. We have no precise 
information concerning its designer, but probably it 
ought to be attributed to the above theorist. It is 
certainly not mentioned by his immediate predecessors, 
Fakhr al-Din al-Razi (d. 1209), 3 and Nasir al-Din al-Tusi 
(d. 1273). 4 This scale, which proceeded by steps of two 
limmas and a comma, was clearly founded on the old 
tunbur al-khurdsdm scale, and nominally, at any rate, 
embraced the Pythagorean, Zalzalian, and Persian 
systems. The theorists who built up this system have 
been designated by European authors the " Systema- 
tists." 6 

What scale system was used in Al-Andalus and North 
Africa at this period we have no direct evidence. No 
ratios are mentioned in the Ma'rifat al-naghamdt al- 
thamdn treatise. We can only assume that the old sys- 
tem, already mentioned, was maintained, 6 although we 
know that the Pythagorean Ikhwan al-Safa/ treatise 
was favoured in the late tenth century. We are told, 
however, that North Africa was deeply influenced in 
the arts by Al-Andalus. 7 In music, the impression 
made by Abu'1-Salt Umayya, 8 and Ibn Bajja 9 is openly 
acknowledged. The influence of the Andalusians in 
Africa was especially marked after the fall of Seville 
(1248), when 400,000 of its people went into exile. 

The tabl-khdndh or military band has been lightly 

Ikhwan al Safa', i, 98. 

1 India Office MS., 1811, fol. 173. British Museum MS., Or. 2361, 
fol. 235y.-36. 

9 British Museum MS., Or. 2972, fol. 151 V.-I55. 
4 Paris Bibl. Nat. MS., Arabe, 2466, fol. 197 v. 

This theory was misunderstood by European writers until J. P. N. 
Land wrote his Over de Toonladders der Arabische Mustek (1880) and 
Recherches sur I'histoire de la gamme arabe (1884). See my Facts for the 
Arabian Musical Influence, Append. 49. 

See my Facts for the Arabian Musical Influence, Appendix 38 
' Al-Maqqarl, Moh. Dyn., i, 119, 

Al-Maqqarl, Anal., i, 530. 

Ibn Khaldun, iii, 422. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 207 

touched upon in previous chapters. During this period, 
however, it is lifted into such prominence that we must 
afford it detailed notice. Petty rulers were springing up, 
and all and sundry among them were clamouring for the 
privilege of the tabl-khanah and the nauba (periodic 
musical performance) as part of their patent of royalty. 
Hitherto such honours had been reserved for the khalif 
alone. In the year 966, Al-Mutf had granted leave to 
a general to have kettledrums (dabadib, sing, dabddb) 
played at prayer-times during a campaign, a privilege 
which appears to have been retained on his return. 1 
The Buwaihid amw Mu'izz al-Daula also begged this 
concession from the khalif, but, strange to say, it was 
refused. 2 Indeed, the Arab historians condemn such as 
presumption on the amir's part, which, they aver, 
amounted to a usurpation of the sovereign attributes 
of the khalif. 3 In 979, however, Al-TaT conferred on 
'Adud al-Daula the much-sought privilege, and it is 
claimed that he was the first monarch who obtained this. 4 
This, however, was the three-fold nauba 5 and not the 
five-fold one which was still the prerogative of the khalif. 
Yet in 1000, under Al-Qadir, a minister was allowed to 
beat a tabl (drum) for the five-fold honour, 6 and in 1017 
Sultan al-Daula beat this same nauba. 7 

Under the Saljuqids these privileges continued to be 
extended, although specific distinctions as to the class of 
nauba t and the number and type of instruments to be 
used, were introduced. Khalif Al-Muqtadl (1075-94), 
in appointing a governor to a province, conferred on him 
the great kettledrums called kusdt (sing, kus), and was 
permitted to sound the five-fold nauba within the limits 
of his province, but in the camp of the sultan he was to 
confine himself to the three-fold nauba. s A similar 
distinction was made at the peace treaty between the 

1 The Eclipse of the ' Abbasid Caliphate, ii, 264. 
1 Ibid., v, 435, note. 

Quatremere, Histoire des Mongols, 418. 

The Eclipse of the ' Abbasid Caliphate, ii, 396. 

At daybreak (subfr), sunset (maghnb), and nightfall (' ashd'). 

The Eclipse of the ' Abbasid Caliphate, iii, 345. 
7 Quatremere, loc. cit. 

Quatremere, op. cit., 419. 



208 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

two Saljuqid princes Barkiyaruq and Muhammad in 
1101, when the former took the title of sultan and the 
latter that of malik. with the five-fold and three-fold 
nauba respectively. 1 The last Shah of Khwarizm Jalal 
al-Dln MankubartI (d. 1231), who boasted of playing the 
nauba of Alexander the Great (Dhul-qarnain), had it 
performed on twenty-seven drums of gold encrusted with 
pearls, the players at its inception being the sons of sub- 
ject monarchs. 2 Ghiyath al-Din (d. 1202), the Ghurid, 
had great kettledrums of gold, which were carried on a 
chariot. 3 The Fatimid khalifs also dispensed musical 
honours to subject rulers when conferring patents of 
regality (mardtib)* When Al-'Aziz (d. 996) marched 
into Syria he had five hundred clarions (abwdq, sing. 
buq). 5 We read of the nauba under the Fatimids being 
performed by a large military band. 6 

Nasir-i Khusrau refers to the buq (clarion), the surnd 
(reed-pipe), tall (drum), duhul (drum), kus (kettledrum), 
and kdsa (cymbal) among the Fatimid martial display. 7 
With the 'Uqailids the buq (clarion) and dabddb (kettle- 
drum) were favoured, 8 whilst in Al-Yaman we read of 
the buq and tabl. 9 Nur al-Din, the Zangid at Damascus, 
sounded the five-fold nauba, whilst his amir, the famous 
Salah al-Din only had the three-fold honour. 10 

In Al-Andalus we read of the gold-mounted clarions 
(buqdt) of Al-Hakam II. 11 The Muwahhids reserved the 
drums (tubul) for royalty alone, and the band was formed 
into a separate company with the standard-bearers and 
called the sdqa. 12 

The names of musical instruments, including many 
new ones, crowd upon the scene during this period. 
The *ud qadim or classical lute of four strings still con- 

*Ibid. Al-NasawI, 21. 

' fabaqat al-nasirl, i, 404. 

4 Ibid., 11, 616. Al-Bada'unI, i, 94, 310. 

Ibn Khaldun, Prol., n, 45. 

Quatremdre, op. cit., 420. 

7 Nair-i Khusrau, Safar nama, pp. 43, 46, 47. 

Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society (1901), 755, 785. 

Kay, op. cit. 

10 Quatremfcre, op. cit., 419. 

" Ai-Maqqarl, Moh. Dyn., li, 158. 

" Ibn Khaldun, Pro/., ii, 52. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 209 

tinned to be favoured, 1 in spite of the introduction of the 
'tid kdmil or perfect lute of five strings, which was fretted 
according to the " Systematist " scale. The lute is 
fully described by all the theorists, and the Ikhwan 
al-Safa/ give measurements, 2 whilst we have a design 
in one of the works of Safi al-DIn 'Abd al-Mu'min. 3 
It was made in various sizes, and in some MSS. , instru- 
ments of considerable dimensions are depicted. 4 

The shdhrud was an arch-lute or zither. In the early 
fifteenth century it was certainly an arch-lute, and is 
described as being twice the length of the lute. 5 Two 
new instruments of the lute class were the qupiiz and the 
awzdn, both apparently of Turkish origin, and introduced 
into Egypt under the Ayyubids. 6 The former had a large 
sound-chest, and possessed five double strings. 7 The 
latter had three strings and was played with a wooden 
plectrum. 8 

The tunbur (pandore) family also held its own. The 
tunbur al-baghdddi was still to the fore at the close of the 
tenth century. 9 The two and three-stringed instruments 
are described by Safi al-Din 'Abd al-Mu'min, but they are 
both given the scale of the " Systematists." 10 

The qltdra^ presumably a flat-chested instrument, 
was used in Al-Andalus. Since it was identified with the 
murabba', it was probably quadrangular. 12 Other instru- 
ments of the lute, guitar, or pandore family were the 
mizhar, awtaba, kinnlra or kinndra, kirdn, barbat and 
mi'zaf (?). 

Among psalteries there were the qdnun and the nuzha. 
The latter was the invention of Safi al-DIn 'Abd al- 

I It was still in use in the i5th century. Bodleian MS., Marsh, 
282, fol. 77. 

Ikhwan al-Safa', i, 97. 

' See my Arabic Musical MSS. in the Bodleian Library, front. 

* Der Islam, iii, fig. 6 in article entitled, " Beitrage zu einer 
Geschichte des Planetendarstellung im Orient und im Okzident." 

* Bodleian MS., Marsh, 282, fol. 79. See frontispiece. 

* Qupuz vuml (Byzantine qupuz) is mentioned in the above cited 
Bodleian MS. 

7 Bodleian MS. as cited, fol. 77 v. Ibid. 

9 Mafatlh al-'ulum, p. 237. 

10 Kitab al-adwar, fasl. 7. 

II Also written qlthara, and in other forms. 
" Kitab al-imta', Madrid MS., No. 603. 



210 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

Mu'min. 1 There was also the mughni, another instru- 
ment invented by this virtuoso* It is described as a 
type of qdnun on the one hand, 3 but is delineated as a 
lute on the other. 4 The jank (sanj) or harp was still in 
use. We have no particulars of its structure until the 
fourteenth century, 5 although in the mid-thirteenth 
century we read of instruments of 36 and 72 strings being 
used at the khalif s court at Baghdad. 6 

The rabdb or rebec, appears to have been specially 
favoured in Khurasan, 7 although it must have had con- 
siderable support in Arab lands, since it passed for a 
national instrument. 8 The term rabdb covered several 
types of bowed instruments with the Arabs, and perhaps 
it was the flat-chested form that was considered the 
national type. 9 In a similar way, the Persians gave the 
term kamdnja (kamdn = a bow) to their bowed instru- 
ments. One particular type was the ghishak (= Arab 
shaushak (?)). 10 The use of the bow is inferred from the 
Ikhwan al-Safa/, Ibn Sma, and Ibn Zaila. 11 

Among wood-wind instruments we read of the mizmdr 
or zamr, the surnd or surndy, the nay, the shabbdba, the 
saffdra, the yard 1 ', the shdhin, the zummdra, the zuldmi, 
the qasaba, the buq [bi'l-qasaba], and the mausul. Brass 
instruments were represented by the buq and nafir. 
Other wind instruments were the urghanun (organ) and 
the armuniqi (pan-pipes). 

Drums were to be found in the kus or great kettledrum, 
the naqqdra, dabddb, or tabl al-markab the ordinary kettle- 
drum, the qasa* or shallow kettledrum, and the nuqaira 
or small kettledrum, the tabl tawtt or ordinary long drum, 

I See my Arabic Musical MSS. in the Bodleian Library, front, 
and Studies in Oriental Musical Instruments, pp. 12-14, Kanz al tuhaf, 
maq. 3. 

Kanz al-tuhaf, maq. 3. 

Bodleian MS., Marsh, 282, fol. 78. 
4 Kanz al-tuTiaf, maq. 3. 

Kanz al-tufyaf. There is a I3th century design in Riano's Notes 
on Early Spanish Music, fig. 52. 

Bretschneider, Notes on Medi&val Travellers, 84. 
' Mafatlh al-'ulum, p. 237. 

Berlin 'MS. (Ahlwardt) 5527, fol. 47 v. 

9 Bodleian MS., Marsh 282, fol. 78 v. 

10 This form occurs in the Ikhwan al-Safa', i, 97, as shaushal. 

II See my Studies in Oriental Musical Instruments, chap. viii. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 211 

as well as the kuba or tabl al-mukhannath the hour-glass- 
shaped drum. Tambourines were represented by the 
duffy ghirbdl, bandair, far, mazhar, tirydl, and shaqf. 
Then there were the cymbals, castanets, etc., in the 
sunuj, kdsdt, musdfiqdt, and qadib 

IH 

One noticeable feature of this period is the absence 
of names of the virtuosi. This is due to the fact that there 
were no historians of music of the calibre of the author 
of the great Kitdb al-aghdni. We certainly have Al- 
Maghribi and Al-Musabbihi in the East, and Yahya [ibn] 
al-Khuduj j al-Mursi in the West, who wrote works of this 
type, but these writings have not come down to us. 
Apart from this, however, a great change had come over 
the land. In the past, a composer's or singer's biography, 
his special compositions and accomplishments, were 
acceptable to the elite of society in Baghdad and other 
cities in close touch with the capital. It was necessary 
to be conversant with these topics since the songs and 
melodies of famous musicians like Ma'bad, Ibn Suraij, 
or Ibrahim al-Mausili belonged to the repertoires. 

With the decline of the Khalifate, culture centres arose 
elsewhere, and the necessity for information about the 
traditional music of a distant metropolis became less 
apparent. Further, the strictures of the Hanbali 
sectaries must have contributed to some extent to the 
diminution if not cessation of this type of literature, 
which dealt specifically with people who made the 
malahi their living. Yet, as Collangettes says, "Si la 
periode suivante n'a pas eu son Al-Isfahani pour nous 
narrer ses chroniques, rien ne nous autorise & croire & 
une decadence/' 1 

A few names among the Andalusian virtuosi have been 
handed down. 

'Abd al-Wahhab al-Husain ibn Ja'far al-Hajib was 
one of the most famous musicians of Al-Andalus at this 
period. Al-Maqqari calls him " the unique one of his 

1 Journal Asiatique, Nov.-Dec. (1904), p. 378. 



212 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

generation in pleasant music (ghina), delightful learning, 
fine poetry, and beautiful expression . . . the most capable 
of mankind in playing the 'ud, and in the different modes 
(tara'iq) played on it, and in composing melodies (luhtin). 
And he would often utter fine sentiments in beautiful 
verses, and mould them upon delightful melodies . . . 
out of his own invention and cleverness." So great was 
his reputation that no musician came from the East 
without first seeking to make his acquaintance, since he 
was recognized as " the one who had attained the highest 
excellence in the profession." His bounty and hospi- 
tality to other musicians were proverbial, and although 
his income was quite a considerable one, he was frequently 
poor on account of this generosity. All his family were 
musicians. 1 

Abul-Hasan [ibn al-Hasan] ibn al-Hasib was a cele- 
brated teacher of music (musiqi) at this time, and is known 
as the tutor of the next mentioned artiste* 

Abu'l-Husain ibn Abi Ja'far al-Waqshi was the son of 
a wazir of Toledo. He is called " a miracle of Allah 
in sagacity . . . gifted with a taste . . . [for music], together 
with a wonderful voice more to be desired than the cup 
of the wine-bibber." 3 

Abul-Husain 'All ibn al-Hamara was a poet and 
musician of Granada. He surpassed all others as a com- 
poser of melodies (alhdn), and was a skilful performer 
on the *ud. He also appears to have been the inventor of 
a special type of lute. 4 

Ishaq ibn Sim' an was a Jew of Cordova and a friend 
of Ibn Bajja, and famous as a composer of melodies in 
all styles. 5 

Yahya ibn 'Abdallah al-Bahdaba was a physician who 
wrote zajal melodies. 6 

Wallada, one of most esteemed poetesses of her day, 
was the daughter of Al-Mustakfi (1024-27), one of the last 
of the Andalusian khalifs. Her salon was the centre of 
attraction for artistes and litterateurs. Her love affair 

1 Al-Macjqarl, Analectes, i, 119. 

Ibid., ii, 516. * Ibid., ii, 515-16. 

* Al-Maqqari, Analectes, ii, 517. 

1 Ribera, La Mtisica de las Cantigas, 72. Ibid., 72. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 213 

with the poet Ibn Zaidun has become a commonplace in 
Andalusian history. She was a musician and has been 
compared with 'Ulayya the musical step-sister of Harun 
al-Rashld. 1 

Hind was a singing-girl of Abu Muhammad 'Abdallah 
ibn Maslama al-Shatabi. She excelled as a performer 
on the 'ud, and Abu 'Amir ibn Yannaq (d. 1152) once 
addressed verses to her expressing his longing to hear the 
notes (naghamdt) of her 'ud in the thaqil awwal rhythm. 2 

Bishara al-Zamir was " one of the cleverest of pipers 
from the East." He played for 'Abd al-Wahhab al- 
Husain. 3 

Nuzha al-Wahabiyya was another famous songstress 
of these days. 4 

In the East, the names of celebrated virtuosi are 
rarer. 

Abu 'Abdallah Muhammad ibn Ishaq ibn al-Munajjim 
(d. 1000) appears to have belonged to the family mentioned 
in the last chapter. It is said of him that there was no 
singer or lutenist who equalled or even approached him 
in ability. He died at Shiraz. 5 

Kama! al-Zaman was the chief court minstrel of the 
Saljuqid sultan San jar (1117-58). There is a story re- 
lated by Minhaj-i-Saraj concerning the effect of his 
'Si-playing on his master. 6 

Umm Abfl-Jaish was an accomplished songstress at 
the court of the Najahid ruler Al-Mansur ibn al-Fatik 
(1109-23 [?]) of Al-Yaman. 7 

Warda was a famous singing-girl of the Najahid 
wazir 'Uthman al-Ghuzzi. 8 

If we have but few names and details of the virtuosi 
there is ample information concerning the theorists and 
litterateurs. 

Abu 'Abdallah Muhammad ibn Alimad ibn Yusuf 

1 Al-Maqqarl, op. cit., ii, 565. 

1 Ibid , ii, 634. Cf. Mohammadan Dynasties, i, 1 66. 

Al-Maqqari, Analectcs, i, 119. * Ibn al-Abbar, Takmila, ii, 745. 

Minhaj-i-Saraj, i, 153-4. 

Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., iii, 401. A similar story is told of 
Rudakf. See Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society (1899), p. 68. 
7 Kay, H. C., Yamun, its early Medieval History, p. 98. 

Ibid. , p. 104-111. 

P 



214 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

al-Khwarizml (fl. 976-97) was the author of a very import- 
ant work entitled the Mafdtih al-ulum (Keys of the 
Sciences), the first of those abridged encyclopaedias which 
afterwards became so common in the East. It was com- 
posed, between the years 976 and 991, for Abu'l-Hasan 
'Ubaidallah al-'Utbl, the wazlr of the Samanid amir Nuh II 
(976-97). Manuscripts of this work are to be found in 
several libraries, the Ley den copy (dated 1160), the most 
perfect, having been edited by Van Vloten who issued the 
text in 1895. * The work is divided into two chapters 
(maqdldt) on (i) The Native Sciences, and (2) The Foreign 
Sciences. These are again divided into various parts 
(abwdb), the seventh part of the second chapter being on 
music (musiqi). It is practically a dictionary of music in 
which we have not only the explanation of musical terms, 
but their proper vocalization (pronunciation). 

The Ikhwan al-Safa' (Brothers of Purity) were a group 
of philosophers, scientists, mathematicians, and littera- 
teurs, who flourished at Al-Basra during the second half of 
the tenth century. Five of them we know by name, 
Abu Sulaiman Muhammad ibn Mushir (or Ma'shar) al- 
Bayusti, Abu'l-Hasan 'All ibn Harun al-Zanjani, Abu 
Ahmad al-Mihrajam, Al-'Awfi, and Zaid ibn Rifa/a. 2 
From these names we see that almost every corner of the 
Khalifate was represented, two Persians, a Palestinian, 
and two Arabs apparently. 3 Ibn al-Qifti says that they 
belonged to a brotherhood for the furtherance of holiness, 
purity, and truth, maintaining that since the religious law 
had been corrupted through ignorance, it needed puri- 
fying. 4 This could only be done, said the Ikhwan al- 
Safa', by combining science and philosophy with religion, 
and more especially Greek philosophy. 5 To this end the 
" Brothers " compiled fifty-one (or fifty-two) tracts 
(rasd'il) which may be said to cover the whole gamut of 
science (including music) and philosophy known to the 

*Van Vloten, Liber Mafdtih al-Olum (Leyden, 1895). 

For these names see Brockclmann, Gesch. der Arab. Lit., i, 213-14, 
Nicholson, Lit. Hist, of the Arabs, 370. 

Browne, Lit. Hist, of Persia, i, 378. 

See Goldziher, Muh. Stud., on the meaning of the word ikhw&n. 

Ibn al-Qifti, 83. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 215 

Arabs. 1 These tracts are said to have been written about 
the year g6i, 2 but it may have been later. Manuscripts 
of these msd'il are to be found in many libraries, and the 
text has been printed several times and also edited, 3 
whilst the mathematical portion (including music) has 
been translated by Dieterici in Die Propaedeutik der 
Amber (1865). 

Abul-Faraj Muhammad ibn Ishaq ibn Abi Ya'qub al- 
Nadim al-Warraq al-Baghdadi, was the author of a book 
called the Fihrist (Index). Of its author we have little 
information save that he was born at Baghdad, that he 
was a bookseller or copyist (warrdq), that he was in 
Constantinople in 988, and that he died about 9Q5-6. 4 
The preface of this monumental work tells us that it is 
" the index of all the books of all peoples, including the 
Arabs and others, which exist in the Arabic language and 
writing, in every branch of knowledge, together with 
information of the writers, and the classes of the authors, 
their genealogies, dates of birth, careers, times of death, 
domiciles, and their merits and demerits, from the time of 
the origin of each science down to the present time," i.e. 
the year A.H. 377 (A.D.gSy-S). 

The work is divided into ten chapters (maqdldf) each of 
which is subdivided into sections (funuri). Three of the 
chapters give us valuable data concerning the early works 
on music and musicians, not only of the Arabs, but also 
of the Greeks which were known in Arabic translation. 
The third section, third chapter contains, " Stones of the 
Boon Companions, Favourites, Men of Letters, Musicians 
(mughanniyyun) , Jesters, Buffoons, and the titles of their 
books." 6 The first section, seventh chapter, gives us, 
" Stories of the Natural Philosophers and Logicians [in- 
cluding Music Theorists}, and the titles of their books, with 

1 For a list of the various subjects dealt with in the risdla on music 
see my Arabic Musical Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library. 

The preface to the Bombay edition says the middle of the loth 
century. Professor Nicholson says the end of the loth century. See 
Der Islam, iv., 324. 

The best texts are those of Bombay (1887-89), and Dieterici (Die 
Abhandlungen der Ichwan es-Safa, 1886). 

It has been suggested that he was related to Isfcaq al-Mausill. See 
Fihrist, xi, and Nicholson, op. cit. 362. 

1 Fihrist, 140-56. 



216 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

the various translations and commentaries on the same, such 
as are still in existence or are no longer extant." 1 The 
second section, seventh chapter, deals with, " Stories of 
Geometricians , Arithmeticians , Music Theorists (musi- 
qiyyuri), Accountants, and Engineers."* Most of the 
books mentioned in this " Index " have probably dis- 
appeared, and possibly only a half-dozen out of some one 
hundred musical books are extant to-day. The holo- 
causts of Hulagu, Tlmur, and Ximenes in the thirteenth 
and fifteenth centuries brought about the destruction of 
the great libraries which probably contained, in many 
cases, solitary exemplars of the works mentioned in the 
Fihrist. The text of this work was published by Fliigel, 
Roediger, and Miiller in 1871-2, and the former had already 
analysed the work in the Z.D.M.G. in 1859. 

Abu'1-Wafa' al-Buzjani (940-98), one of the greatest of 
Arabian mathematicians, was born in Khurasan, but before 
his twentieth year he had settled in Baghdad. It was due 
to his genius that improvements were made in spherical 
trigonometry. Several of his mathematical works have 
been preserved but not his commentaries on Euklid nor 
his Mukhtasar fl fann al-iqd' (Compendium on the Science 
of Rhythm), a work not mentioned in the ordinary 
biographies, but is referred to in the Irshdd al-qa$id of 
Al-Akfani (d. 1348) in company with other important 
treatises on music which include those of Al-FarabI, 
Ibn Sina, $afi al-DIn 'Abd al-Mu'min and Thabit ibn 
Qurra. 3 

Maslama al-Majriti or Abu'l-Qasim Maslama ibn Afemad 
al-Majriti (d. 1007) belonged, as his name tells us, to 
Madrid in Al-Andalus. He was a famed mathematician 
and astronomer who flourished during the prosperous 
reigns of Al-Hakam II (961-76) and Hisham II (976- 
1009) . 4 His writings were translated into Latin under the 
name of Moslema or Albucasim de Magerith, and had 

Fihrist, 238-65. 

Fihrist, 265-85. 

1 Bibliotheca Indica, 1849, p. 93. See my article " Some Musical 
MSS. Identified " in J.R.A.S., Jan., 1926. For the life of Abu'1-Wafa . 
see the Fihrist, 266, 283. Ibn al-Qiftf, 287. Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet. 
Hi, 320. 

Ibn Abl Uaibi'a, ii, 39. Al-Maqqarl, Analectes, ii, 134. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 217 

considerable circulation in Western Europe. 1 Maslama 
revised the astronomical tables of Muhammad ibn Musa 
al-Khwarizmi, the astronomer of Al-Ma'mun (813-33), and 
is credited with having added the tangent function. 8 
The rasa'il of the Ikhwan al-Safa' appear to have been 
introduced into Al-Andalus by him, and two copies in the 
Bodleian Library carry his name. 8 

Abu'l-Hasan 'All ibn Abi Sa'id 'Abd al-Rahman ibn 
Yunus (d. 1009), popularly known as Ibn Yunus, was a 
famous astronomer and mathematician at the court of 
the Fatimid khalif Al-Hakim (996-1021), celebrated for his 
contributions to spherical trigonometry and his Kitdb al- 
zig al-Hakimi (Hakimite Tables). 4 He was an excellent 
poet, and a work entitled Al-'uqud wa'l-su'udff aw$af al- 
'ud (The Necklaces and Felicities in the Praises of the 
Lute) stands in the name of Ibn Yunus. 5 

Al-Maghribi or Abul-Qasim al-Husain ibn 'All al- 
Maghribi (981-1027) claimed descent from the Persian 
musical king Bahram Ghur (430-38). He was born at 
Cairo, and at an early age entered the service of the 
Fatimid khalif Al-Hakim. He was then employed by 
Fakhr al-Mulk, the famous literary wazir of the Buwaihid 
amir Baha' al-Daula at Baghdad. Later he became wazir 
to the 'Uqailids at Al-Mausil and re-entered the service 
of the Buwaihids as wazir to Musharrif al-Daula. He died 
at Mayyafarikln under the protection of the Marwanids. 
Ibn Khallikan speaks highly of his erudition, " of which, 
even an inferior portion would suffice for any kdtib." 
Al-Maghribi has a place here as the author (or compiler) 
of a Kitdb al-aghdni (Book of Songs). 6 

Al-Musabbihi, or 'Izz al-Mulk Muhammad ibn 'Ubai- 
dallah ibn Ahmad al-Harrani al-Musabbihl al-Katib 
(977-1029), belonged to Egypt, and served the Fatimid 
khalif Al-Hakim. He rose to be a provincial governor 

1 Steinschneider, Die europ. ilbersetzungen aus dem Arabischen, i, 34, 

49, 74- 

Cajori, History of Mathematics (2nd edit.), 104. 

Farmer, Arabic Musical MSS. in the Bodleian Library, 4, 6. See 
also Suter, Die Math. u. Astron. der Araber, p. 76. 

Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., 11, 365. Abu'1-Fida', Annal. Musi., ii, 619 
' Ahlwardt, Verz., No. 5536, 31. 

Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., i, 450. IJajjI Khalifa i, 357. 



218 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

and one of Egypt's great historians. To his credit stands 
a collection of songs entitled the Mukhtar al-aghdnt wa 
ma'amha (Selections from the Songs with Explanations 
of the Verses). 1 

Ibn Sma, or Abu 'All al-Husain ibn 'Abdallah ibn Sma 
(980-1037), was born at Afshana near Bukhara. Shortly 
after this event his father settled in the latter city, and 
here Ibn Sma or Avicenna as he is generally called, was 
educated. At the age of seventeen he was appointed 
physician to the Samanid Nuh II (976-97) at Bukhara. 
In this position he had access to the unique library of this 
monarch which contained solitary exemplars of the 
scientific works of the " Ancients " (the Greeks). At the 
age of eighteen, Ibn Sma claimed to have mastered all the 
sciences. After the death of his father, four years later, 
the young scientist began the life of a wandering scholar. 
He then settled at Al-Raiy, where the amir Majd al-Daula 
was the nominal ruler, but later entered the service of 
Shams al-Daula (997-1021) at Hamadhan, who appointed 
him his wazir. During this period he wrote numerous 
works, besides teaching a crowd of pupils, which however, 
did not prevent him from spending his nights with singers 
and musicians. When Sama' al-Daula (1021) succeeded 
as amir, Ibn Sma became dissatisfied with his position, and 
fled to 'Ala al-Daula at Isfahan, where he spent the last 
ten or twelve years of his life. 2 Here he wrote, among 
other things, upon the theory of music (musiqi), in 
which subject says Ibn Al-Qifti, he was able to throw 
light on the negligence of the " Ancients " (the Greeks) in 
several questions. 3 

Besides his famous Qdnun f7l-tibb (Canon of Medicine) 
which became one of the text-books for physicians 
throughout the civilized world, Ibn Sma was noted for his 
contributions to science and philosophy. Three of his 
works at least deal with the theory of music at some 

1 Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., iii, 87. Hajjl Kh a l!fa, i, 367. Cf. his 
name and the title of his book in these writers. 

* Ibn al-Qifti, 4 J 3 etseq. Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., i, 440. Ibn Abl 
Usaibi'a, ii, 2. Abu'1-Fida', Annal. Musi., iii, 93. 

It has been assumed by Casiri (i, 271) and Wenrich (189) that this 
work on music was an abridgement of a work by Euklid, but the text 
does not actually say this. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 219 

length. His most important work on this subject is that 
contained in the Shifa, which has been printed at Teheran 
(A.H. 1313), and is to be found in manuscript in several 
libraries in this country. 1 According to the preface of 
the Najdt, this work also contains a section on the science 
of music (Urn al-musiqi), which came at the end of the 
chapter on the mathematical sciences (ulum riyddiyya). 
Yet strange to say, neither the printed edition (Cairo, 
A.H. 1331), nor the manuscript in the British Museum 
(Add. 9613), nor the old Latin version (Rome, 1593), 
contain this section on music. At the same time, it is to 
be found separately in two MSS. in the Bodleian Library. 2 
Ibn Abi Usaibi'a says that Ibn Sina also wrote a Madkhal 
ila sina'at al-milsiqi (Introduction to the Art of Music), 
which, we are expressly told, was different from that in the 
Najdt. In the Persian Danish ndma, written for the 
Kakwaihid 'Ala' al-Daula, Ibn Sina's last patron, there 
is also a section on music. This is practically identical 
with the treatise in the Najdt, and appears to have been 
written after Ibn Sina's death by his disciple Al-Juzjani. 3 
Minor chapters on the science of music, with mere 
definitions, also occur in his Risdla fi taqdsim al-hikma 
(Treatise on the Divisions of the Sciences) and similar 
works. 4 

For an account of the subjects dealt with by Ibn Sina 
on the theory of music in his Shifff and Najdt the reader 
is referred to my Arabic Musical MSS. in the Bodleian 
Library. Ibn Sina, who was known as " The Chief 
Teacher " (al-shaikh al-ra'is), had a tremendous influence 
on Arabian and Persian musical theorists for many 
centuries. 

Ibn al-Haitham, whose full name was Abu'l-'AH al- 
Hasan ibn al-Hasan (or al-Husain) ibn al-Haitham 
(c. 965-1039) was one of the most brilliant mathematicians 
and physicists that the Arabs produced. He was born at 

1 Bodleian Library MS., Pocock, 109 and 250. India Office MS., 
1811. Royal Asiatic Society MS., 58. 

Bodleian Library MSS., Marsh, 161 and 521. 

British Museum MS., Add 16830. See also Add. 16659 and Or. 
2361. 

'SeeiheRasd'ilft'l-hikmawa'l-tabi'iyyat (Constantinople, A.H. 1298), 
and the Ley den MS., Or. 985, fol. 170 v. 



220 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

Al-Basra, where he rose to the post of wazw, but was 
invited to the court of the Fatimid khalif Al-Hakim. 
Here he was given a position in the administration, the 
duties of which Ibn al-Haitham could not, or would not, 
perform. This roused the ire of the khalif and he was 
compelled to conceal himself until the khalifs death 
(1021), when he was able to devote himself publicly to 
literary and scientific pursuits. Ibn Abi Usaibi'a gives 
the titles of some 200 treatises on mathematics, physics, 
medicine, and philosophy of which Ibn al-Haitham was 
the author. Euklid was especially studied by this 
savant and he wrote a Shark qdnun Uqlaidis (Comment- 
ary on the Canon of Euklid) and a Shark al-\a\rmumqi 
[li-Uqlaidis] (Commentary on the Harmonics [of Euklid]) 
but alas ! neither of these commentaries have come down 
to us. 1 Another work of his that appears to have 
perished is the Risdla fl ta'thlrdt al-luhun al-musiqif?l- 
nufus al-hayawdniyya (Treatise on the Influences of Musical 
Melodies on the souls of Animals). 

Abu Mansur al-Husain ibn Muhammad ibn 'Umar ibn 
Zaila (d. 1048), referred to as Al-Husain ibn Zaila, is 
evidently the same individual mentioned by Ibn Abi 
Usaibi'a as Abu Manur ibn Zaila, one of the most dis- 
tinguished pupils of Ibn Sina. a He was the author of a 
lengthy and valuable treatise on music entitled the K itdb 
al-kdfi fi'l-musiqi (Book of Sufficiency in Music), a copy 
of which (the only one that appears to have survived) is 
preserved in the British Museum. 8 

Abu'l-Hakam 'Umar . . . al-Karmani (d. 1066) was 
born at Cordova of a Carmona family, and died at 
Saragossa. He was distinguished as a mathematician 
and physician, and had studied in the East, notably at 
Harran, the home of the Sabians. He popularized the 
rasd'il of the Ikhwan al-Safa'. 4 

Ibn Naqiya was the more general name by which 

1 Ibn al-Qifti, 168. Ibn Abi U?aibi'a, ii, 90. 

Ibn Abi Uaibi'a, ii, 19. See also British Museum MSS. Add. 
16659, fol. 332, and Add. 23403, fol. 106. 

Brit. Mus. MS., Or. 2361, fol. 220, et seq. 

Ibn Abi U$aibi'a, ii, 40. Al-Maqqarl, Analectes, ii, 232. Moh. 
Dyn. t i, 150. The latter claims him to have introduced the writings 
of the Ikhwan al-Safa' into Al-Andalus. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 221 

Abu'l-Qasim 'Abdallah ibn Muhammad (1020-92) was 
known. He was a poet of Baghdad who was interested 
in music, playing the mizhar (pre-Islamic lute). 1 It is as 
the author of an abridgment of the great Kitab al-aghdm 
however, that he finds a place here. 2 

Abu'1-Fadl Hasday ibn Yusuf ibn Hasday belonged to 
an old Jewish family of Saragossa in Al-Anialus. The 
dates of his birth and death are denied us, but he was a 
young man in 1066. He was not only celebrated as a 
mathematician and astronomer, but displayed much 
talent in rhetoric and poetry, and was learned in the 
science of music (miislqi)* 

Abul-Salt Umayya is the name given to Umayya ibn 
'Abd al-'Aziz ibn Abfl-Salt (io68-ii34). 4 He was born 
at Denia in Al-Andalus but migrated to Egypt in 1096, 
where he rose to high esteem with the Fatimid khalifs 
until falling into disfavour, he was flung into prison. 
In iii2 he retired to Al-Mahdiyya, where his learning 
brought him the patronage of the Zairids. Ibn Khallikan 
says that he " possessed superior information in the 
different branches of general literature . . . skilled in 
philosophy . . . deeply versed in the sciences of the 
Ancients/ 15 Ibn Abi Usaibi'a informs us that Abul-Salt 
excelled in the science of music (muslqi) and that he was 
a performer on the 'iid* He was the author of a Risdla 
ffl-musiqi (Treatise on Music), 7 which appears to have been 
an important work since it was translated into Hebrew, 
and a passage from it is quoted by Profiat Duran in his 
Ma'aseh Efod (written in 1403), 8 hence perhaps, as 
Steinschneider says, 9 the work was supposed to exist in 

1 Erroneously termed a dulcimer by De Slane (Ibn Khallikan, Biog. 
Diet., ii, 64). A dulcimer is also referred to in another place by De 
Slane (i, 186) where no such instrument is mentioned in the text. 

Hajjl Khalifa, i, 367. Here he is called Ibn Baqlya. Ibn Khallikan, 
Biog. Diet., ii, 64. Wajayal, i, 376. 

1 Ibn Abl Usaibi'a, ii, 50. 

4 Collangettes (Jour. Asiat., 1904, p. 382) calls him Ibn al-Zalt ibn 
'Abd al-'Aziz al-Umarl. Rouanet (Lavignac's Encyclopidie da la 
musique, v, 2680) says the same. 

Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., i, 228-31. 

Ibn Abl Usaibi'a, ii, 52-62. 

Ahlwardt, Verz., No. 5536, 5. 

Grammar (Vienna, 1863), p. 37. 

Steinschneider, Jewish Literature, 337. 



222 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

the Oratory. 1 As a composer, the influence of Abu'1-Salt 
Umayya on North African music appears to have been 
considerable. 2 

Ibn Bajja (Avenpace), is the more popular cognomen of 
Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn Yahya ibn al-Saigh (d. 1138). 
He was born at Saragossa towards the end of the eleventh 
century, and practised as a physician in his native city, 
but after the fall of Saragossa (1118) to the Christians, he 
resided at Seville and Xativa. Later he went to Fez in 
Morocco, where he was wazir at the Murawid court. Here 
he was poisoned at the instigation of an enemy. He was 
a voluminous writer and no fewer than twenty-four of his 
works on medicine, philosophy, and natural science have 
come down to us. Besides his unrivalled gifts in these 
sciences, he was " skilled in the art of music (musiqi), and 
was a clever performer on the 'ud (lute)/' as we are 
informed by Ibn Abi Usaibi'a. 3 Ibn Khaldun assures us 
that his music (talhiri) was well-known, 4 and Ibn Sa'id 
al-Maghribi (d. 1274 or 1286) says that Ibn Bajja gave his 
name to a collection of melodies the items of which were 
very popular. 5 That he was " a skilful musician " is 
testified by his enemy Al-Fath ibn Khaqan (d. 1134 or 
1140). His reputation as a musical theorist appears to 
have been considerable since Ibn Sa'id al-Maghribi 
informs us that his book on music (musiqi) enjoyed the 
same reputation in the West as that of Al-Farabi in the 
East. 8 Indeed, after Al-Farabi, " there was no man like 
Ibn Bajja for the elevated manner in which he wrote and 
spoke on the sciences." " Where," says another An- 
dalusian, " are those that can be compared to Ibn Bajja 
for the acquirements in the science of music and philos- 
ophy ? " Unfortunately we do not possess any of the 
writings on music of this great author and thinker. 7 

Wolf, Bib. Heb., ii, 331. 
Al-Maqqarl, Anal., i, 530. 
Ibn Abi Usaibi'a, ii, 62. 
4 Ibn Khaldun, Prol., in, 393. 

Al-Maqqarl, Anal., ii, 125. 

Al-Maqqarl, Anal., ii, 125. 

7 The Shark kitdb al-sama' dl-tabl'l H-Aristutalls is not a " Commentary 
on the Treatise on Sound by Aristotle," as Gayangos said (Moh. Dyn.) 
i, Append. A. Hi., but a " Commentary on the Physics (<J>VOIK)I a*poaais)." 
See my Facts for the Arabian Musical Influence, appendix 33. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 223 

Abu'l-Hakam al-Bahili, or Abul-Hakam 'Ubaidallah 
(or 'Abdallah) ibn al-Muzaffar ibn '"Abdallah al-Bahili 
(1093-1155), was born at Almeira in Al-Andalus. 1 Before 
the year 1122 he migrated to the East, and taught at a 
school which he himself opened at Baghdad. Later, he 
was a physician in the camp-hospital of the 'Iraqian 
Sal juqid sultan Mahmud (1117-31). Finally, he settled at 
Damascus, where he was highly esteemed as a physician, 
mathematician, litterateur, and musician. Al-Maqqari 
says, " Abul-Hakam excelled in the philosophical 
sciences, and was skilled in medicine and fine wit. . . . 
He played the 'ild (lute) and his work on music is well- 
known/' Ibn Abi Usaibi'a also testifies to his musical 
talents, and both these writers, as well as Ibn Khallikan, 
praise his " diwan of excellent poetry." 2 

Muhammad ibn al-Haddad, or in full Abu 'Abdallah 
Muhammad ibn Ahmad ibn al-Haddad (d. 1165) was 
another Andalusian, and the author of a work entitled by 
Casiri, Musices Disciplina (Musical Instruction). 3 No 
other information appears to be available concerning this 
theorist, although Hajji Khalifa mentions a Muhammad 
ibn Ahmad ibn 'Uthman al-Andalusi, who is also called 
Ibn al-Haddad. The latter however is said to have died 
in 1087.* 

Ibn al-Naqqash al-Baghdadi, or Muhadhdhab al-DIn 
Abul-Hasan 'AH . . . ibn 'Isa (d. 1178), was a renowned 
mathematician and music theorist at Damascus. He was 
personal physician to Nur al-Din the Zangid atdbag 
(1146-63) and was also employed at the Nurl hospital. 
We know of him specially as the tutor of Abu Zakariyya 
al-Bayasi and Ahmad ibn al-Hajib. 5 

Abu Zakariyya Yahya al-Bayasi was an Andalusian 
who migrated to the East and lived most of his time in 
Egypt and Syria. He was a physician, mathematician, 
and musician, and was one of the medical men at the court 

1 Ibn Khallikan says Al-Yaman, whilst Bar Hebraeus says Murcia. 
Al-Maqqarl, Anal., i, 548. Ibn Abi Usaibi'a, ii, 144. Ibn 
Khallikan, Biog. Diet., ii, 82. 

Casiri, ii, 73. The Arabic title of this work is not given by Casiri. 

Hajji Khalifa, iii, 245. 

Ibn Abi Usaibi'a, ii, 162, 181. 



224 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

of Salah al-Din the Ayyubid sultan (1171-93). He was a 
pupil of Ibn al-Naqqash in the science of music, and Ibn 
Abi Usaibi'a says, " Abu Zakariyya . . . made for Ibn 
al-Naqqash many instruments of a composite nature, 
which he derived from engineering (handasa}* . . . was 
an excellent player on the *ud (lute), and he constructed 
an organ (urghari), and sought by artful contrivance the 
playing of it." 1 

Abu'1-Majd Muhammad ibn Abi'l-Hakam (d. 1180) was 
a son of Abu'l-Hakam al-Bahili already mentioned, and 
was a noted physician, mathematician, astrologer, and 
musician. Whilst in the service of the Zangid atabag 
Nur al-Din (1146-63) at Damascus, he had charge of his 
hospitals. Ibn Abi Usaibi'a says of him, " Abul- 
Majd had knowledge of the science of music (mustqi) and 
played the ud (lute) ; excelled in the song (ghina'}, the 
rhythms (iqd'[dt]) t the zamr (reed-pipe), and other instru- 
ments. And he constructed an organ (urghari) in which 
he attained perfection." 3 

Abu Nasr As'ad ibn al-Yas ibn Jirjis al-Matran (d. 
1191) was born at Damascus of a Christian family. He 
studied medicine and the sciences at Baghdad, and was a 
pupil of Ibn al-Naqqash. For some time he was in the 
service of Salah al-Din, and amassed a library of ten 
thousand volumes. 4 Besides being the author of a num- 
ber of medical works, a Risdlat al-adwdr (Treatise on the 
Musical Modes) is said to have been written by him.* 

Kamal al-Din ibn Man'a, or Abu'1-Fath Musa ibn 
Yunus ibn Muhammad ibn Man'a (b. 1156) was born at 
Al-Mausil. At the Nizamiyya college at Baghdad he 
won high honours, and, returning to his native town, 
he became noted as a teacher of mathematics, and was 
later the Principal of several colleges. Ibn Khallikan 

1 Or "geometry." 

Ibn Abi Uaibi'a, ii, 163. 

Ibn Abi Usaibi'a, ii, 155. 
Ibn Abi U?aibi'a, ii, 175. 

Ahlwardt, Vevz. t No. 5536, 25. I have not been able to verify this 
statement elsewhere. The only work bearing a similar title in Ibn Abi 
Usaibi'a, is a Risdlat al-adwdr entitled by Leclerc (Hist, de la Mid. 
arabe., ii, 45), " Un recueil des Ptriodes des Chaldtens," and by 
Wustenfeld (Gesch. d. Arab, aerzte, 101), "Compendium libri 
mansionum Ibn Wahschijjae." 



THE 'ABBASIDS 225 

says of him : "In the mathematical sciences he was 
particularly distinguished. . . . He knew physics . . . was 
acquainted with all the parts of mathematical science 
explained by Euklid, astronomy, conies . . . music, and 
mensuration. In all these sciences he was without a rival/' 1 

Yahya [ibn] al-Khudujj al-Mursi, also called Yahya 
ibn al-Khudujj al-A'lam, was, as his name tells us, a 
native of Murcia. Al-Maqqari informs us that he was 
the author of a Kitab al-aghdm written in imitation of the 
work of Abu'l-Faraj [al-Isfahani] 2 . He belonged, it 
would seem, to the twelfth century. 

Ibn Rushd (Averroes), or Abu'l-Walid ibn Ahmad ibn 
Muhammad ibn Rushd (1126-98), the famous Andalusian 
philosopher, has been claimed by several writers as the 
author of a " Commentary on Music/' 3 Renan has 
pointed out that this is probably an error due to the 
ambiguity of a Hebrew word, and that the work which 
these writers had in mind was Ibn Rushd's Paraphrase of 
Aristotle's Poetics and Rhetoric* At the same time it is 
not unlikely, if a mistake has been made, that such a work 
as his Shark al-sama l al-tabi'i* might have misled these 
authors, since the above could be understood to refer 
to a commentary on the nature of sound. 6 

'Alam al-Din Qaisar ibn Abfl-Qasim (1178-1251) was 
born at Afsun in Upper Egypt and died at Damascus. 
" In Egypt and Damascus," says Ibn Khallikan, " he 
was looked upon as the great master of the age in all the 
mathematical sciences." He had Kamal al-Din ibn 
Man'a as his teacher, and he relates the following story 
of his first interview with this savant. " He [Kamal 
al-Din] asked me by what science I wished to begin. 
1 By [the theory of] music/ said I. ' That happens very 

1 Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., iii, 467-68. Ibn Abl Usaibi'a, i, 306. 

Al-Maqqarl, Anal., ii, 125. Gayangos, in his Mohammedan 
Dynasties, i, 198 (cf. 480), names him Yahya ibn al-Haddaj (variants, 
al-Hudj and al-Khurj). 

Labbe, Nova Bibl. MSS., 1 16 (quoted by Renan) ; Wolf, Bib. 
Heb., i, 20 ; and De Rossi, Cod. Hcb., ii, 9-10. 

4 Renan, Averroes, 63. See Wenrich, De auct. Graec., 152. 

Called Talkhls kitab al-samd' al-taWl li-Aristutdlls by Ibn Abf 
Usaibi'a. 

Ibn Abl U?aibi'a, ii, 75. See Al-Maqqarl, Moh. Dyn., i, Append. 
A, iv. 



226 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

well,' he said, ' for it is a long time since anyone studied 
it under me, and I wished to converse with some person 
on that science so as to renew my acquaintance with it. 1 
I then commenced [the theory of] music, after which I 
passed successively to other sciences, and, in about 
the space of six months, I went over more than forty 
works under his tuition. I was already acquainted with 
[the theory of] music, but I wished to be enabled to say 
that I had studied that science under him/ 1 Hasan 
ibn 'Umar says that 'Alam al-Din was particularly 
distinguished for his profound knowledge of music. 1 

Ibn Sab'In, or Abu Muhammad 'Abd al-Haqq ibn 
Ibrahim ibn Muhammad al-Ishbili (d. 1269) was a native 
of Murcia and died at Mecca. He became famous for 
his Kitdb al-ajwiba 'an \lmin} al-as'ula (Answers to 
Questions) written at the command of the Muwahhid 
sultan 'Abd al-Wahid al-Rashid (1232-42) in reply to 
certain philosophical questions set by the Emperor 
Frederick II of Hohenstaufen. 2 He was also the author 
of a Kitdb al-adwdr al-mansub (Book of the Related 
Musical Modes), the solitary copy of which is in the library 
of Ahmad Taimur Bash a. 3 

Abu Ja'far Nair al-Din al-Tusi (1201-74) was born 
at Tus in Khurasan. He was the most celebrated scientist 
of his day, and was especially noted for his mathematical 
and astronomical works. As court astrologer to Hulagu, 
the Mughal sultan, he accompanied the conqueror on his 
campaigns, and was able to amass a library of 400,000 
books, pillaged from the collections of Baghdad, Syria 
and Mesopotamia. 4 He was a most productive author 
and among his mathematical works is a tract on the 
'Urn al-musiqi (science of music), a copy of which is 
preserved in the Paris Bibliotheque Nationale. 5 The 
Turks attribute to him, it would seem, the invention 

1 Ibn Khallikan, Biog. Diet., iii, 471-3. Abu'1-Fida', Annal. Musi. 
iv, 479, 529- 

Al-Kutubf, Fawat al-wafayat, i, 247. 

Hildl, xxviii, 214. 

Bar Hebraeus Hist. Orient., 358. Abul-Fida', Annal. Musi., v, 37. 
1 De Slane's Catalogue, No. 2466. In the library of King's College, 

Cambridge, there is a Persian work on music entitled the Kanz al- 
tuliaf, which is attributed to Naslr al-D!n al-fusl. (J.R.A.S., June, 
1867, p. 1 1 8). The work may belong to another author. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 227 

of the flute called mahtar duduk 1 . His greatest pupil 
was Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi (1236-1310), the author of the 
Durrat al-taj, one of the most authoritative works on 
the " Systematist " theory of music. 

Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Raquti was a 
thirteenth century savant of Murcia, distinguished for his 
abilities in music, mathematics and medicine. When 
the Christians took Murcia (i3th century), their king 
retained Al-Raquti to teach in the schools which he 
founded. He died in Granada. 2 

Safi al-Din 'Abd al-Mu'min (ibn Yusuf) ibn Fakhir 
al-Urmawi al-Baghdadi was probably born at Baghdad 
in the early years of the thirteenth century, although 
his father (or grandfather) evidently came from Urmia, 
a town in Adharbaijan. 3 We find him at Baghdad in 
the service of the last 'Abbasid khalif Al-Musta'sim 
(1243-58) as his chief court minstrel, boon companion, 
caligraphist, and librarian. 4 He was on very intimate 
terms with the khalif, who allowed him a pension of 5,000 
golden pieces a year. Safi al-Din was in Baghdad when 
it was sacked by Hulagu in 1258, and Hajji Khalifa 
recounts a story which is taken from the Habib al-siyar,* 
which relates that when the city was given over to the 
Mughal hordes for slaughter and pillage the great musician, 
by reason of his musical reputation, managed to gain 
access to Hulagu, and so charmed the conqueror by his 
performances on the ( ud that Hulagu ordered that 
$afi al-Din, his family and property, should be spared 
in the general devastation. 6 Entering Hulagu's service, 
his pension was doubled to 10,000 pieces of gold, which 
was paid out of the revenues of Baghdad. He then 
became tutor of the sons of the Mughal wazir or sahib 
dlwdn Shams al-Din Muhammad ibn Muhammad al- 
Juwaini, 7 who, with his brother 'Ata Malik, the author 
of the Tarikh-i jahan gushd, appointed the famous 

1 Evliya Chelebl, Narrative of Travels, i, ii, 237. 

Casiri, ii, 81-82. 

De Sacy, Chrest. arab., i, 70. 

*Fakhrl, 572. 

1 Hablb al-siyar, Hi, i, 61. 

Hajji Khalifa, iii, 413. 

f Cf. Carra de Vaux, Le Tvaiti des Rapports musicaux, p. 4. 



228 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

musician to the head of the Correspondence Bureau 
(diwdn-i insha) at Baghdad. 

Safi al-Dm's two pupils, Baha' al-Din Muhammad 
(1240-79) and Sharaf al-Din Harun (d. 1286), the sons oJ 
the wazir were extremely kind to him. 1 It was for the 
latter that the great musician wrote his famous treatise, 
the Risdlat al-Sharafiyya (Sharafian Treatise). The 
former took Safi al-Dln with him to Isfahan when he was 
appointed governor of Al-'Iraq and 'Iraq 'Ajami in 1265, 
On the death of Baha* al-Dm (1279) an( i the fall of the 
family of Al-Juwaini (1284), the savant virtuoso lost his 
protectors, and finally fell on evil days, being im- 
prisoned for a debt of 300 pieces of gold. Yet, when he 
had plenty he spent money lavishly, and could indulge in 
fruits and perfumes costing 4,000 pieces of silver, for 
the benefit of his friends. Yet this man, whose text- 
books were the standard authority among music theorists 
for centuries, and are even quoted to-day, died in a debtors' 
prison. 2 

Safi al-Din 'Abd al-Mu'min was a man of wide culture. 
Mirza Muhammad says that he was " especially celebrated 
for his skill in music and caligraphy." In the former 
art, Ibn Taghrfbirdi declares him to have been excelled 
by none since the days of Ishaq al-Mausili, the boon 
companion of Harun al-Rashid, whilst in the latter he is 
placed on a level with such masters of the art as Yaqut 
and Ibn Muqla. Besides being the inventor of two 
stringed instruments the mughni, an arch-lute, which 
he devised during his stay in Isfahan, as well as the nuzha, 
a new type of psaltery, 3 Safi al-Din was the author of two 
important treatises on the theory of music the Kitab 
al-adwdr (Book of Musical Modes), and the Risdlat 
al-Sharafiyya (Sharafian Treatise). The former work, 

* In music, philosophy, and belles lettres, Baha al-Din stood heads 
above many of his contemporaries. D'Ohsson, Histoire des Mongols, 
iv, 11-12. Sharaf al-DIn was also " one of the most accomplished men 
of his day/' and a dlwan of his poems is preserved in the British Museum 
(Or. 3647). See Ta'rlkh-i jahdn gushd, xlviii. 

For full life of Safi al-DIn see authorities quoted by Mirza Muham- 
mad in his introduction to the Ta'rlkh-i jahdn gushd, li. 

1 Kanz al-tufyaf, Brit. Mus. MS., Or. 2361, fol. 263 v, 264 v. See my 
Studies in Oriental Musical Instruments, pp. 12-15. 



THE 'ABBASIDS 229 

which is probably the earlier and was probably written 
in 1252, is perhaps the better known to the theorists. 
Manuscripts of this work may be found in the Bodleian 
Library, 1 the British Museum, 2 and other collections. 
All sorts of commentaries (shuruh) have been written on 
this work, and three are to be found in the British 
Museum. 3 The Risalat al-sharafiyya is more familiar 
to European readers on account of a resume of the work 
having been published by Baron Carra de Vaux. 4 Manu- 
scripts of the work are to be found in the Bodleian 
Library, 5 Berlin, 6 Paris, 7 Vienna, 8 and elsewhere, 9 as 
well as an epitome at Cairo. It is said to have been 
written in 1267, 10 and we have a manuscript (Berlin) 
dating from 1276. At the Bodleian there is another 
work by Safi al-Din entitled Fl 'ulum al-arud wa'l- 
qawajl wa'l-badi', a work which deals with prosody, 
rhyme, and rhetoric, not with " rhythm " as has been 
recently stated. 11 The great repute of Safi al-Din is 
that he was the pioneer of a school which propagated 
the " Systematist Theory." 

Ibn al-Qif ti, the more general name by which we know 
Abu'l-Hasan 'All ibn Yusuf al-Qifti (1172-1248), is in- 
cluded here because he is such a valuable source of in- 
formation concerning writers on the theory of music. 
Born at Qift (the ancient Koptos) he was educated at 
Cairo, but spent nearly his whole life in Palestine and 
Syria. Although fulfilling the duties of wazir at Aleppo, 
he devoted himself to literary studies. 12 His greatest 

1 Bodleian Library, Marsh 521 (two copies), Marsh 161 (two copies). 
See my Arabic Musical MSS. in the Bodleian Library. 

I British Museum, Or. 136, and Or. 2361. See Ha] j I Khalifa, iii, 361. 
8 Or. 2361. 

Le Traits des rapports musicaux ou l'6pttre a Scharaf ed-Din (Paris, 
1891). 

Bodleian Library, Marsh 115, and Marsh 521. 

Berlin MS., Ahlwardt, Verz., 5506. 
7 Paris MS., De Slane, Cat., 2479. 

Vienna MS. Flugel, 1515. 

Journal, American Oriental Society, i, p. 174. 
10 Ibid., p. 174. 

II Grove's Dictionary of Music (3rd Edit.), iv, 498. The slip is evidently 
due to the Latin title, De scientiis prosodiae, rhythmorum et dictioms 
figuratae, given in the Bodleian catalogue. Several erroneous state- 
ments are made in the former work concerning Sail al-Din. 

" Yaqut, Irshad, v, 477. 

Q 



230 A HISTORY OF ARABIAN MUSIC 

work appears to have been a Kitdb ikhbdr al-ulamd' f 
which has come down to us in a synopsis made by Al- 
Zauzani entitled (or at least known as) the Ta'rikh 
al-hukamd' (History of the Learned), a work quoted fre- 
quently in the foregoing pages. 1 

Ibn Abi Usaibi'a or Muwaffaq al-Din AbuVAnbas 
ibn Abi Usaibi'a (1202-1270) is another writer in the same 
category. Born at Damascus, he completed his medical 
education at the Nasiri hospital in Cairo. He was 
appointed to the charge of one of Salah al-Din's hospitals 
in this city, and later became personal physician to the 
amw 'Izz al-Din in Sarkhad. 2 His chief literary pro- 
duction, the 'Uyun al-anbd\ a history of physicians, is 
another work used in these pages for information concern- 
ing music theorists. 3 

*The Arabic text was edited by Lippert (Leipsic, 1903). 

1 Travaux du Vie Congrds intern, des Orientahstes Leide, ii, 259. 

A. Miiller published the text (K6nigsberg, 1884). 



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231 



232 BIBLIOGRAPHY 

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BIBLIOGRAPHY 233 

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BIBLIOGRAPHY 241 

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(2) MANUSCRIPTS. 

1. 'Abd al-Mu'min ibn Safi al-Dm, Bahjat al-riih. 

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2. Al-Amuli (Muhammad ibn Ahmad), Nafais al- 

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429-45. 
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4. Al-Farabi, Kitab al-musiql. Madrid MS. 602 

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5. Al-Farabi, Ih$a' al-ulum. Escorial MS. 646. 

fols. 27-45. 

6. Hunain ibn Ishaq, Ijtima'at al-falasifa. Munich 

MS. Cod. Mon. arab. 651. 

7. Ibn Ghaibi ('Abd al-Qadir), Jdmi* al-alhdn. 

Bodleian MS. Marsh 828 

8. Ibn Khurdadhbih [Title not given]. Berlin MS. 

Pm. 173, fol. i. 

9. Ibn Sina, Danish ndma : dar 'Urn musiqi. 

Brit. Mus. MS. Or. 2361, fols. i57-i6iv. 
10. Ibn Sma, Danish ndma : dar 'Urn musiql. 

Brit. Mus. MS. Add. 16659, f 9 ls - 333-337 v - 
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521. fols. I59-I70V. 
12. Ibn Sina, Kitab al-najdt. Bodleian MS. Marsh 

161. fols. i-gv. 
*I3. Ibn Sina. Kitdb al-shifd* . India Office MS. 1811. 

fols. I52v.-i74v. 

14. Ibn Sina, Kitab al-shifd\ Royal Asiatic Society 
MS. 58, 



246 BIBLIOGRAPHY 

15. Ibn Sin., Kitab al-shifa't Bodleian MS. Pocock 

250, fols. 74-93V. 

16. Ibn Sma, Kitab al-shifa'. Bodleian MS. Pocock 

109, fols. 74v.-3o8v. 

17. Ibn Zaila (Abu Manur Al-Husain), Kitab al- 

kdfl fi'l-musiqi. Brit. Mus. MS., Or. 2361. 

fols. 220-3&V. 

18. Ikhwan al-Safa', Rasa'il. Bodleian MS. Hunt 

296, fols. 23-38. 

19. Ikhwan al-Safa', Rasa'il. Bodleian MS. Marsh 

189, fols. 25v-4iv. 

20. Kanz al-tuhaf. Brit. Mus. MS. Or. 2361, fols. 

247-69. 

21. Kanz al-tuhaf. Leyden MS. Cod. 271 (2) Warn. 

22. Al-Kindi, Risdla f I khubr ta'lif al-alhdn. Brit. Mus. 

MS. Or. 2361, fols. 165-8. 

23. Al-Kindi, Risdla ffl-luhun. Berlin MS, We. 1240. 

fols. 22-24V. 

24. Al-Kindi (?) [Title not given]. Berlin MS. We. 

1240. fols. 25-31. 

25. Al-Kindi, Risdla fl ijzd* khabariyya al-musiqi. Ber- 

lin MS. We. 1240. fols. 3iv.-35v. 

26. Al-Ladhiqi ('Abd al-Hamid), Fathiyya fi 'Urn 

al-musiql. Brit. Mus. MS. Or. 6629. 

27. Lisan al-Dm (Ibn al-Khatib) (?), [Title not given], 

Madrid MS. 334 (3) (Robles). 

28. Ma'rifat al-naghamdt al-thaman (sic). Madrid 

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29. Muhammad ibn Murdd MS. Brit. Mus. MS. 

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30. Muristus, Sariat al-juljul. Brit. Mus. MS. Or. 

9649. fols. nv.-i3. 

31. Muristus, San ( at al-urghin al-zamri. Brit. Mus. 

MS. Or. 9649, fols. 6v-n. 

32. Muristus, Sariat al-urghin al-buqi. Biit. Mus 

MS. Or. 9649, fols. iv-5. 

33. Al-Razi (Fakhr al-Dm), Jdmi* al-ulum. Brit. 

Mus. MS. Or. 2972. 

34. Al-Razi (Fakhr al-Dm), JamV al-ulum. Brit. Mus. 

MS. Or. 3308. 

*35* Safi al-DIn 'Abd al-Mu'min, Kitab al-adwar. 
Brit. Mus. MS. Or. 136. fols. i-sgv. 

36. afi al-Dm 'Abd al-Mu'min, Kitab al-adwar. 

Brit. Mus. MS. Or. 2361. fols. i8v-32. 

37. $afi al-Dm 'Abd al-Mu'min, [Kitab al-adwar]. 

Bodleian MS, Marsh 161. fols. 10-42 v. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY 247 

38. Safi al-Din 'Abd al-Mu'min, Kitdb al-adwdr. 

Bodleian MS. Marsh 161. fols. 43-83. 

39. Safi al-DIn 'Abd al-Mu'min, Kitdb al-adwdr. 
'Bodleian MS. Marsh 521. fols. I-32V. 

40. Safi al-DIn 'Abd al-Mu'min, Kitdb al-adwdr. 
'Bodleian MS. Marsh 521. fols. 118-58. 

41. Safi al-DIn 'Abd al-Mu'min, [Kitdb al-adwdr]. 

Paris MS. Arabe 2865. fols. 6-23V. 

42. Safi al-Dm 'Abd al-Mu'min, Risdlat al-sharafiyya. 

Bodleian MS. Marsh 115. fols. 2-55V. 
43 Safi al-DIn 'Abd al-Mu'min, \Risdlat al-sharafiyya] 
Bodleian MS. Marsh 521. fols. 34v.-n6. 

44. Sharh al-adwdr. Brit. Mus. MS. Or. 2361. 

fol. 33v. et seq. 

45. Sharh Mauldnd Mubdrakshdh. Brit. Mus. MS. 

Or. 2361. 

46. [Al-Shalahi] , Kitdb al-imtd' wa'l-intifd* . Madrid MS. 

603 (Robles). 

47. Al-Shirazi (Kutb al-Din), Durrat al-tdj. Brit. Mus. 

MS. Add.' 7694. 

48. Al-Tusi (Nasir al-DIn) [Title not given]. Paris MS. 

Arabe 2466. fols. I97v-ig8. 

49. Yahya ibn 'AH ibn Yahya, Risdla fi'l-musfqi. 

Brit. Mus. MS. Or. 2361. fols. 236v-238v. 



INDEX TO PERSONS 



Al-' Abbas ibn 'Abd al-Muttalib, 20 
Al-'Abbas ibn al-Nasa'I, 98, 131 
'Abda ibn al-Jabib, 14, 17 
'Abdallah ibn al-' Abbas ibn al-Fadl 

al-Rabl'I, 97, 140, 160 
'Abdallah ibn 'Abd al-Muttalib, 

20 

'Abdallah ibn Abl'l-'Ala, 159 
'Abdallah ibn 'All ibn Nan', 160 
'Abdallah ibn Dahman, 94, 123 
'Abdallah ibn [Musa] al-Haclf , 93 
'Abdallah [ibn Hilal] ibn Khatal al- 

Adraml, 37 
'Abdallah ibn Ja'far, 48, 54, 58, 60 

61, 68, 84, 85 
'Abdallah ibn Jud'an, n 
'Abdallah ibn Muhammad I (Al- 

Andalus), 144 
'Abdallah ibn Mus'ab, 132 
'Abdallah ibn Muslim ibn Jundab, 

89 
'Abdallah ibn al-Mu'tazz, 140, 161, 

162, 163, 169 

'Abdallah ibn Tahir, 157, 162, 168 
'Abdallah ibn 'Umar, 25 
'Abdallah ibn al-Zubair, 73 
'Abd al-Latff al-Baghdadl, 195 
'Abd al-Mahk, 56, 57, 61, 66, 77, 

82 

'Abd Manaf, 20 

'Abd al-MasIh ibn 'Asala, I, 12 
Abd al-Mu'min ibn Safl al-Dm, 

183, 200 

'Abd al-Muttalib, 20 
'Abd al-Wahhab al-Husain. See 

Al-Hajib 
'Abd al-Qadir ibn Ghaibi. See Ibn 

GhaibI 
'Abd al-Rahfm ibn Fadl al-Daffaf, 

132 
'Abd al-Rahman I (Al-Andalus), 

98, 136 
'Abd al-Rahman II (Al-Andalus), 

98-9, 129, 136, 163 
'Abd al-Rahman III (Al-Andalus), 

97, 145, 163, 185 
' Abd al-Rahman ibn Qatan, 81 
'Abd Shams', 20 

'Ab'd Yaghuth ibn Waqqas, 12 
Al-Ab]ar, 64, 89, 125 



Al-Abla, Abu 'Abdallah, 189 
Abu'l-' Abbas (Al-Saffah), 91 
Abu'l-'Abbas 'Abdallah ibn al- 

'Abbas ibn al-Muttalib, 15 
Abu 'Abdallah Muhammad ibn 

Ishaq ibn al-Munajjim, 213 
Abu ''Abd al-Rahman Ibn Mas'ud, 

23 

Abu'l-' Ala' Ash'ab ibn Jubair, 88 
Abu'l-' Ala' al-Ma'arrl. See Al- 

Ma'arrl 

Abii 'All al-Hasan. See Al-Masdud 
Abu 'Amir ibn Yannaq, 213 
Abii'l-'Anbas ibn Hamdun, 169, 

170 

Abu'l 'Atahiya, 118, 121 
Abu Bakr, 26, 37, 39, 40-1 
Abu Bishr Matta, 175 
Abu Da'ud ibn Juljul, 174 
Abu'1-Fadl Hasday. See Hasday. 
Abu'1-Fadl Radhadh, 161 
Abu'l-Futuh Majd al-Dln, 195 
Abu'l-Hakam al-Bahill, See Al- 

Bahill 
Abu'i-Hakam al-Karmanl. See Al- 

Karmanl 
Abu Hanlfa, 29 
Abu'l-Hasan . . . ibn al-Hasib. See 

Ibn al-Hasib 
Abu Hashlsha, 134, 153, 158, 159, 

161 
Abu'l-Husain al-Darraj, See Al- 

Darraj 
Abu'l-Husain ibn Abl Ja'far al- 

Waqshl. See Al-WaqshI 
Abu 'Isa 'Abdallah al-Mutawakkil, 

"5, 139, 159 

Abu 'Isa ibn Harun, 94, 96 
Abu Ishaq al-ShlrazI. See Al- 

Shlrazf 
Abu Ishaq al-Zajjaj, See Al- 

Zajjaj 
Abu Kamil al-Ghuzayyil. See 

Al-Ghuzayyil 
Abu Mahdura, 33 
Abu'l Majd Muhammad ibn Abl'l- 

Hakam, 224 

Abu Malik al-A'raj, 118 
Abu Man?ur al-Munajjim, 166 
Abu Mihjan, 74 



249 



250 



INDEX TO PERSONS 



Abu'l-Misk Kafur, 144 

Abu Miskln, 50 

Abu Musa, 40 

Abu Musa al-Ash'arl. See Al- 

Ash'ari 

Abu Muslim, 131 
Abu Nasr . . . al-Farabl. See Al- 

Farabi 
Abu Nasr ibn al-Matran. See 

Ibn al-Matran 
Abu Nuwas, 101 
Abu Sadaqa, 94, 117 
Abu Salt Umayya, 192, 196, 201, 

206, 221-2 

Abu Said al-Hasan al-Basrl, 23 
Abu Sufyan, 28 
Abu Talib, 20 
Abu f ammam, 82 
Abu Sulaiman al-Darani. See 

Al-Daran! 
Abu 'Ubaida ibn al-Mutbanna, 

124, 171 
Abu'l-'Ubais ibn Hamdun, 159, 161, 

170 

Abu Umama, 24 
Abu'l Wafa 1 al-Buzjanl. See Al- 

Buzjan! 

Abu Zakkar, 132 
'Adi ibn al-Rabl'a, 18 
'Adi ibn Zaid, 5 
Al-'Adid (Fatimid), 192 
'Adud al-Daula, 180, 207 
'Aclil (Ayyubid), 193 
'Affra, 19 
'Afza, 136 
Ahmad ibn ['Abdallah ibn] Abl'l- 

''Ala', 142, 159 
Ahmad ibn Muhammad al-Yamanl. 

See Al-Yamanl 

Ahmad al-NasIbl. See Al-Naslb! 
Ahmad ibn Sadaqa, 96, 123, 140, 

158 

Ahmad Taimur Basha, 177 
Ahmad ibn Yahya al-Makk!, 96 

106, 114, 139', 159 
Al-Ahwas, 74, 86, 87 

'A*'isha, 24, 26, 27, 41, 48, 57 
'A'isha bint Sa'd, 48, 57 
'A'isha bint falha, 48, 68 
Al-Akfani, 216 

'Ala' al-Daula, 219 

'Ala' al-Din (shah), 200 

'Alam al-Din Qaisar, 201, 225 

Alexander the Great, 208 

'AH, 25, 34, 38, 39, 43, 59 

'All ibn Harun ibn 'All ibn Yahya, 

149, 168 

'All ibn Mahdl (Al-Yaman), 183 
'All ibn Musa al-Maghribf, 177. 

See Al-Maghribl. 
'All ibn Sahl ibn Rabban, 174 



'AH ibn Sa'ld al-AndalusI. See 

Al-AndalusI. 
'All ibn Yahya ibn Abl Manur, 

126, 167 
'Alluyah, 94, 96, 97, 117, 123, 148, 

H9. 159 

Almodad, 14 

'Alqama, 18 

'Als ibn Zaid, 2 

'Alun, 98, 131 
Al-Amln, 94-5, 101, 105, 113, 120, 121, 

123, 133, 134 
Al-Amir (Fatimid), 192 

'Amir ibn Murra, 161 

'Amr ibn Bana, 96, 97, 114, 120, 
140, 149, 157-8, 170 

'Amr al-Ghazzal, 94, 132 

'Amr ibn Hashim (Hisham) ibn 
'Abd al-Muttalib, 37 

'Amr 'lyar. See 'Amr ibn Umayya 
Dhamlrl 

'Amr al-Maidanl. See Al-Maidan! 

'Amr ibn Kulthum, 5 

'Amr ibn 'Uthman ibn Abl'l- 
Kannat, 87 

'Amr ibn Umayya Dhamlrl, 38 

'Amr ibn al-Zubair, 83 
Al-AmulI, Muhammad ibn Mahmtid, 
203 

Anas ibn Malik, 25 
Al-AndalusI, 'All ibn Sa'ld, 177 

Anjusha, 25 

'Aqld, 96, 117 

Arad-Nannar, xii. 

Aristotle, 127, 150, 175, 202 

Aristoxenos, 151 

Arnab, 37 
Al-'Arji, 74, 86 

Al-A'sha Maimun ibn Qais, 12, 18, 19, 
28,79 

A'sha Hamdan, 9, 57 

Ash'ab ibn Jablr, 64 
Al-Ash'arl, Abu Musa, 33 
Al-Ashraf Musa (Ayyubid), 193 

'Asim ibn 'Amr, 42 

Ashurbampal, ix 
Al-Asma'I, 14, 124, 136, 154, 171 
Al-Asma'i. See Muhammad 'Abd 
al-Jawwad 

'A^a Malik, 227 

Atarrad, 64, 85 

'Ath'ath al-Aswad, 140, 161 

'Atika, 89, 124, 135 

Avenpace. See Ibn Bajja 

Averroes. See Ibn Rushd 

Avicenna. See Ibn Sina, 171 
Al-'Aziz (Fatimid), 190, 193, 208 

'Azza al-Maila', 37, 46, 47, 51, 
54-5, 68, 75, 78, 79, 87, 113, 125, 

133, H7 
Al-'Awfl, 214 



INDEX TO PERSONS 



251 



Baba 'Amr. See 'Amr ibn Umayya 
Dhamlrl 

Baba Sawandlk, 38 

Badhl, 119, 134, 148 

Baha' al-Daula, 180, 217 

Baha' al-Dln Muhammad, 228 

Baha' al-Dln Zuhair, 193 
Al-Bahdaba, Yahya ibn 'Abdaliah, 212 
Al-Bahill, Abu'l-Hakam, 182, 196, 
201, 223 

Bahrain Ghur, 4, 217 
Al-Baidhaq al-Ansari, 63, 89 
Al-Bara ibn Malik, 25 

Barbad, 148, 199 

Bar Hebraeus, 64 

Barjawan, 190 

Barkiyaruq, 208 

Barauma, 94, 116, 131 

Basbas, 132 

Bashshar ibn Burd, 95 
Al-Bayasl, Abu Zakanyya, 193, 223 
Al-BayustI, Abu Sulaiman, 214 

Bazya, 163 

Biiai, 33, 37 

Bint 'Afzar, 19 

Bishara al-Zamir, 213 

Bishr ibn Marwan, 56, 74 

Budaih al-Malty, 48, 58, 61, 75 

Bugha 1 , 162 
Al-Buhturl, 82, 158 

Bukht-Yishu', 139 

Bulbula, 75, 89 

Bunan, 163 

Bmmn ibn 'Amr, 140, 158 

Burdan, 67, 87-8, 113, 147 

Bard al-Fu'ad, 75, 89 
Al-Buzjan!, Abu'l-rWafa' 201, 216 



Cain. See Qain 
Charlemagne, 100 
Chingiz Khan, 184 



Dahman (al-Ashqar), 64, 88 
Al-Dal'ai Nafidh, 53, 57-8, 75, 125 

Daman, 136 

Dananlr, 119, 134, 185 
Al-Daranl, Abu Sulaiman, 35 
Al-Darraj, Abu'l-Husain, 36 

David, 33, 35, '78, 80 

Dhat al-Khal, 135 

Dhu'1-Nun, 36 

Dilal, 7 
Al-Dinawari, 28 

Diya', 135 

Diya' al-Dln Muhammad Yusuf , 200 

Diya' al-Dln ibn al-Athlr, 198 

Dubais, 115, 159 

Dufaq, 136 



Euklid, 151, 202, 220 



Fadl (Poetess), 101, 138 

Fadl (Songstress), 136 
Al-Fadl al-Barmakl, 42, 121 
Al-Fadl ibn Rabi', 103 

Fahlldh (Fahlabad). See Barbad. 
Al-Fa'iz (Fatimid), 192 

Fakhr al-Dln al-RazI. See Al- 
RazI 

Fakhr al-Dln Ta'us Marwi, 200 

Fakhr al-Mulk, 180, 217 

Fand, 53, 75 

Al-Farabl, 15, 18, 144, 149, 152, 154, 
155, 172, 175-7, 181, 199, 216, 

222 

Farlda, 134, 140, 162-3 
Al-Fanha (or Al-Far'a), 75, 89 

Fartana, 37 
Al-Farra', 124 
Al-Fath ibn Khaqan, 222 

Fatima, 38, 189 
Al-Firkah, 195 

Fulaih ibn Abl'l-'Aura', 94, 106, 
"3, 119, 134, 135 



Galen, 126, 151 
Al-Ghamr, 82, 83 

Al-Ghand, 75, 80-1, 83, 86, 125, 171 
Al-Ghazali, 24, 25, 30, 36, 65, 188, 194, 

195 

Ghiyath al-Dln, 208 
Al-Ghuzayyil, Abu Kamil, 62, 64, 77, 

89 
Gudea, xi. 



Habbaba, 63, 75, 82, 85, 86-7 
Hablb Afandl al-Zayyat, 170 

Al-Hadl, 79, 93, 100, 112, 115 

Al-Hafiz (Fatimid), 192 

Al-Hajib, 211-12 

Hajiz ibn 'Auf al-Azdl, 19 

Al-Hakam I (Al-Andalus), 98, 131 

Al-H[akam II (Al-Andalus), 164, 185, 

208, 216 

Hakam al-Wadl, 64, 92, 93, 94, 100, 
' 100, in, 112-13 

Al-Hakim (Fatimid), 190, 217 
Hakim ibn Ahwas al-Sughdl, 154 
Hamduna bint 'All ibn Nafi', 160 
Hamdun ibn Isma'Il, 148, 170 
Hammad ibn Ishaq al-MauilI, 
' 97, 126, 171 
Hammad ibn Nashlt, 55 
Hammawaihi, 135 
Hamza ibn 'Abdaliah ibn al- 
' Zubair, 85 
Ifamza ibn Malik, 133 



252 



INDEX TO PERSONS 



Hamza ibn Yatfm, 38 
Al-Harith ibn Abl Shamir, 18 
Al-Harith ibn Jfalim, 19 

Harun ibn 'All ibn Yahya ibn Abl 

Manur, 167, 188 

Harun al-Rashld, 31, 94, 96, 99, 
103, 104, 106, 108, 112, 113, 
114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, 

121, 122, 123, 124, 129, 131, 

135, 136. 160 

Hasana, 136 

Al-Hasan ibn 'All, 25, 48 
Al-Hasan al-Basrl, 66 
Al-Hasan al-Masdud. See Al- 

' Masdud 

Al-Hasan al-Na?ibI, 153, 170 

Hasday ibn Yusuf ibn Hasday, 188, 
' 221 

Hatim al-Ta'I, 19 

Haydn, 101 

Hazlla, 19 

Hermes, 200 

Hibat Allah, 75, 89 

Hibbal, 93 

Hind, 213 

Hind bint 'Utba, 10, 19 

Hind bint Yamin, 41 

Hisham, 83-4, 83 

Hisham I (Al-Andalus), 98, 129 

Hisham II Al-Andalus), 185-6 

Hisham, III (Al-Andalus), 186, 216 

Hisham ibn 'Abd al-'Azlz, 160 

Hisham ibn Mirya, 80 
Al-Hudall, 64, 75, 88 
Al-Hujwlrl, 35, 36 

Hulagu, 178, 184, 216, 226, 227 

liunain al-Hlrl, 55-6, 63, 77, 80, 
88, 125, 171 

Hunain ibn Ishaq, 126, 151 

Huraira, 19 



Ibn 'Abbad, 180 

Ibn 'Abd Rabbihi, 145, 156, 159, 

166-7, 195 
Ibn Abl 'Atlq, 7_4 
Ibn Abl'l-Dunya, 146, 194 
Ibn Abl Lahab, 63 
Ibn Abl Usaibi'a, 229 
Ibn 'A'isha, 63, 64, 75, 82-8, 85, 

86, 87, 125, 157, 171 
Ibn Allshra, 2 

Ibn al-'Arabl, Abu Bakr, 195 
Ibn al-Athlr, Diya' al-Dln, 198 
Ibn al-Athlr 'Izz al-Dln, 166 
Ibn Badrun, 53 
Ibn Bajja, 176, 188, 189, 196, 201, 

206, 212, 222-3 
Ibn al-Dubbl, 171 
Ibn Duraid, 42 
Ibn al-Faqlh al-Hamadhanl, 41 



Ibn Flla', 97 

Ibn Firnas, 144, 170 

Ibn GhaibI, 'Abd al-Qadir, 198, 

199, 200, 2O3 

Ibn Ghahb, 185 

Ibn al-Haddad, Muhammad, 201, 

223 
Ibn al-Haitham, 151, 190, 193, 201, 

202, 219-20 
Ibn Hajar, 28, 42 
Ibn al-Hajjaj. See Ibrahim 
Ibn Hanbal, 29, 139 
Ibn Hamdfs, 'Abd al-Jabbar, 187, 

198 
Ibn al-Hamara, Abu'l-Husain 'All, 

212 

Ibn al-Hasib, Abu'l-Hasan, 212 
Ibn al-Hijarl, 185 
Ibn Jami', 93, 94, 102, 103, 112, 

113, 115-6, 117, 118, 119, 135, 

146 

Ibn al-Kalbl, 50, 51, 75, 83 
Ibn Khaldun, 39, 45, 76 
Ibn Khallikan, 93 
Ibn Khurdadhbih, 49, 139, 141, 

155, 156, 166, 169-70 
Ibn Man'a, 182, 201, 224-5 
Ibn al-Manql, 94, 140, 162 
Ibn Mas'ud, 24 
Ibn al-Matran, 193, 224 
Ibn Misjah, 61, 69, 73, 75, 77-8, 86, 

125, 171 
IbnMuhriz, 70, 71, 75, 78-9, 80, 

83, 86, 87, 113 
Ibn Muqla, 228 
Ibn Mush'ab, 89 
Ibn Naqlya, 220 
Ibn al-Naqqash, 201, 223, 224 
Ibn al-Qassar, 160 
Ibn al-Qiftl, 214, 229 
Ibn Ridwan, 193 
Ibn Rushd (Averrogs), 187, 189, 

194, 225 

IbnSab'In, 201, 226 
Ibn Safwan, 81 
Ibn Said al-Andalusf, 177 
Ibn Sa'Id al-Maghribl, 177, 184, 

222 

Ibn Sida, 199 
IbnSlna (Avicenna), 143, 151, 

180, 194, 196, 197, 199, 201, 

202, 203, 206, 210, 216, 218-9 
Ibn Suraij, 53, 54, 62, 63, 68, 73, 

75, ?8, 79-80, 81, 82, 83, 86, 

87, 89, 113, 125 

Ibn Tarkhan, Abu'l-Hasan, 171 
Ibn Tlfalawlt, 189 
Ibn Tiifail, 189 
Ibn junbura, 77, 87 
Ibn Yunus, 217 
Ibn Zaidun, 213 



INDEX TO PERSONS 



253 



Ibn Zaila, 196, 197, 199, 201, 202, 

203, 205, 206, 210, 220 
Ibn Zurzur. See Al-Qasim 
Ibrahim ibn Abi'l-'Ubais, 143, 162 
Ibrahim ibn al-Hajjaj, 145, 163 
Ibrahim ibn al-Hasan ibn Sahl, 97 
Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdl, 95, 96, 100, 
101, 106, 108, 112, 114, 119-21, 
122, 123, 124, 134, 146, 147, 149, 
157, 168, 170 

Ibrahim ibn al-Mau?ilI, 7, 58, 75, 
84, 93, 94, 96, ioo, 101, 102, 109, 
no, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116-7, 
118, 119, 121, 122, 123, 131, 135, 

146, 157 

Ibrahim ibn al-Mudabbir, 162 
Ibrahim ibn al-Qasim ibn Zurzur, 

143, 162 

Ibrahim ibn Yazld al-Nakha'I, 23 
'Ibthar (sic), 94 
Ikhwan al-Safa', 151, 180, 196, 201, 

202, 205, 206, 209, 210, 214-5, 217 
'Inan, 136 
Imru'u'1-Qais, 8 
'Isa ibn Zar'a, 202 
Al-Ifaham, Abu'l-Faraj, 75, 144, 149, 

153, 164-5, 181, 185, 198, 211 
Ishaq al-lsra'lll, 193 
Ishaq al-Mausilf, 7, 82, 94, 97, 101, 

103, 105, 106, 107, 108, 113, 114, 

117, 118, 119, 120, 123, 124-6, 

129, 133, 134. 135, 139, 146. 147. 

148, 149, 157, 158, 159, 160, 162, 

167, 168, 169, 170, 228 
Ishaq ibn Sim'an, 212 
Al-Ishblll, Ahmad ibn Muhammad, 196 
Ismail ibn al-Harbidh/131 
lyas ibn Qablsa, 12 
'Izz al-Daula, 180 



abala ibn al-Ayham, n, 12 

abir ibn 'Abdallah, 24 

abir ibn Hayyan, 151 
>'far ibn 'All ibn Nan', 160 
Ja'far al-Barmakl, 92, 102, 153, 158, 
159, 160, 161, 165 

'a' far ibn al-Hadl, 134 

a' far ibn al-Ma'mun, 134 

a'far al-Sadiq, 75 

'a'far al-TTabbal, 101, 132 

aha'I, 140 

ahza al-Barmakl, 57, 133, 143, 
148-0 

Jalal al-Dln al-Husain, 200 
Jalal al-Dln Mankubartl, 208. See 

Shah of Khwarizm 
Jamlla, 54, 57, 68, 74, 81, 82, 85-6, 

87, H3. 133 
Jarlr, 66 
Jesus ben Sirach, 22 



Jirab al-Daula, 159 
Jubal, 6, 7 

Judah ben Tibbon, 175 
Al-JuzjanI, 219 

Ka'b ibn al-Ashraf, 23 

Ka'b ibn Zuhair, 23 
Al-Kalbl, 50 

Kamal al-Zaman, 182, 218 

Kamal al-Dln ibn Man'a. See Ibn 

Man' a 
Al-Kamil (Ayyubid), 108 

Kanlz, 143, 162 
Al-Karmanl, 220 
Al-Kathir, Ibn al-Salt, 82 

Khadfja, 10 

Khahd, 34 

Khahd ibn 'Abdallah al-Qasrl, 56 

Khahd al-Barmakl, 92 

Khahd ibn Ja'far, 19 
Al-Khatlb al-Baghdadl, 161 
Al-Khalll, 105, 126, 151, 170 
Al-Khansa, 19 

Khaula, 46, 54 
Al-Khudujj, 225 

Khulaida, 19 

Khulaida (2), 75, 89 

Khumarawaih, 144 

Khusrau Parwlz, 199 
Al-Khwarizml, Muhammad ibn 'Abdal- 
lah, 201, 202/218-4 

Al-Khwarizml, Muhammad ibn Musa, 
217 

Al-Kmdl, 71, 96, 105, 106, 108, no, 
124, 127-8, 139, 149, 15* 1 5* 
152, 154, 169, 172, 199. 

Al-Kisa'i, 124 
Kurmna 37 



Labid, 8, 12 

Ladhdhat al-'Aish, 75, 89 
Al-Ladhiql, 203 
Al-Laith ibn Nasr, 154 

Lamak (Lamech), 7 

Al-Ma f arrI, Abu'l-'Ala', 103, 138 
Ma'bad, 54, 55. 62, 63, 64, 75, 80, 

81-2, 85, 86, 87, 113, 125, 157 
Ma'bad al-Yaqtlnl, 132 
Al-Madlnl, Abu Ayyub Sulaiman, 153, 

171 
Al-MaghribI, Abu'l-Qasim al-IJusain, 

211, 217 

Al-MaghribI, 'AH ibn Musa, 177 
Al-MaghribI, Ibn Sa'Id. See Ibn Sa'Id. 

Mahbuba, 140, 162 

Al-Mahdl, 87, 92, 03, 99, 103, H2, 113, 
115, 119, 129, 132 



254 



INDEX TO PERSONS 



Mahmud (Saljuqid), 182, 223 
Al-MaidanI, Ahmad, 58 

Al-Maidanl, 'Amr, 159. 

Maimonides. See Musa ibn Maimun 

Maimuna, 134 

Maisun, 60 
Al-Majrltl, 180, 181, 201, 211, 216-7 

Maknuna, 119 

Malik ibn Anas, 29, 87, 104 

Malik ibn Hamama, 58 

Malik ibn Jubair al-Mughannl, 19 

Malik Shah, 182 

Malik al-Ta'I, 64, 67, 75, 82, 84-5, 

86, 87 ' 

Al-Ma'mun, 94, 95-6, 105, 113, 108, 
114, 117, 120, 121, 122, 123, 
124, 127, 128, 133, 137, 138, 
157, 158, 163, 167, 169, 217 
Al-Mansur, 83, 92-3, 112, 132 
Al-Mansur (wazlr), 186 
Al-Man?ur (musician), 98, 129, 131 
Al-Mansur ibn Ishaq, 174 

Man?ur ibn faiha ibn Tahir, 169 
Al-Marghlnanl, 194 

Manya, 37 

Marwan I, 53, 61 

Marwan II, 65, 164 
Al-Masdud, 97, "5, 140, 158-9 
Al-Mas'udl, 60, 64, 144, 153, 155, 

163, 165-6, 168, 169, 181 
Al-Mawardl, 194 

Mawiya, 19 
Al-Mihrajanl, Abu Ahmad, 214 

Mmhaj-i-Saraj, 213 

Mozart, 101 

Mu'awiya I, 25, 53, 54, 55, 58, 60, 
66, 69, 77 

Mu'awiya II, 61 

Mu'awiya ibn Bakr, 10 

Mudar ibn Nizar ibn Ma'add, 14 
Al-Muhajir, 41 

Muhalhil, 18 

MUHAMMAD, i, 10, u, 19, 20, 

43 
Muhammad I (Al-Andams), 130, 

144 

Muhammad II (Al-Andalus), 186 
Muhammad (Saljuqid), 208 
Muhammad ibn 'Abbad al-Katib, 

83, 87 
Muhammad ibn 'Abdallah ibn 

Tahir, 114, 140, 169 
Muhammad 'Abd al-Jawwad al- 

Ama'I, 165 
Muhammad ibn Ahmad ibn Yahya 

ai-Makkl, 141, 160 
Muhammad ibn Abl'l-'Abbas, 92, 

112 
Muhammad ibn Abl'l-Hakam, 182, 

224 
Muhammad ibn 'All ibn Nan', 160 



Muhammad ibn 'Amr al-Raff, 94, 

H7,132 

Muhammad ibn 'Amr al-Ruml, 96 
Muhammad ibn Da'ud ibn Isma'll, 

132 
Muhammad ibn Fadl al-Jarjara'i, 

139 
Muhammad ibn Hamza, Abu 

Ja'far, 131 

Muhammad ibn al-Harith, 94, 95 
96, 97, 117, 120, 121-2, 134, 139, 
149 

Muhammad ibn al-Hasan, 107 
Muhammad ibn Ishaq ... al- 

Musa'bl, 167 
Muhammad ibn Ishaq . . . al- 

Warraq. See Al-Warraq 
Muhammad ibn Mazdad, 122 
Muhammad ibn Murad, 203 
Muhammad ibn Tahir, 163 
Muhammad ibn Yahya ibn Abl 

Mansur, 167 
Al-Muhtadl, 140-1, 146 
Al-Mu'izz (Fatimid), 190 

Mu'izz al-Daula, 207 
Al-Mukarram, Ahmad ibn 'All, 183 
Mukhanq, 94, 95, 96, 97 i I QI . 
117, 121, 135, 148, 149, 159, 170' 
Al-MuktafI, 140, 142, 143, 167, 169 
Al-Mundhir (Al-Andalus), 144, 163 

Mu'nisa, 163 

Al-Muntasir, 140, 158, 159, 160 
Al-Muqauqis, 37 
Al-MuqtadI, 181, 207 
Al-Muqtadir, 140, 142, 161, 163, 173 
Al-MuqtafI, 181 

Musa ibn Maimun (Maimonides) , 

189, 193 

Mus'ab ibn al-Zubair, 48 
Musabih, 136 
Al-Musabbihl, 'Izz al-Mulk, 190, 211, 

217 

Musharrif al-Daula, 180, 217 
Al-MustadI, 181 
Al-Musta'ln, 140, 173 
Al-Mustakfl, 143 

Al-Mustakf! (Al-Andalus), 186, 212 
Al-Musta'll (Fatimid), 192 
Al-Mustanjid, 181 
Al-Mustanir, 183 
Al-Mustansir (Fatimid), 191 
Al-Mustars'hid, 181 
Al-Musta'sim, 184, 227 
Al-Mustazhir, 181 

Mut'a, 136 
Al-Mu'tadid, 141-2, 159, 161, 163, 167, 

169' 
Al-Mu'tamid, 133, 141, 144, 156, 158, 

1 60, 167, 169 

Al-Mu'tamid (Al-Andalus), 187 
Al-Mutanabbl, 144 



INDEX TO PERSONS 



255 



Al-Mutawakkil, 114, 123, 124, 126, 
138, 139-40, 156, 157. 158, 159, 
160, 162, 163, 167, 170 

Al-Mu'tazz, 137, 140, 160 

Al-Mutl', 179, 207 

Al-MuttaqI, 143 

Mutayyim al-Hashimiyya, 134, 185 

Al-Muwaffaq, 141, 167, 172 



Al-Nabigha, 5, 6, 13 

Al-Nadr ibn al-Hanth, 14, 18, 23, 69 

Nan' al-Khair, 48, 58, 75 

Nan' ibn 'Alqama, 80 

Nafi' ibn Tunbura, 75, 87 
Al-Naghashl, 53 

Na'ila bint al-Maila, 55 

Naram-Sin, xi 

Nashlt, 48, 49, 54. 55, 77. 81 

Nashwan, 162 

Nasr ibn Sayyar, 65 
Al-Nasibl. See Al-Hasan 
Al-Naslbi, Ahmad, 56-7 
Al-Nasir, 183-4 

Naslr al-Dln al-Tusl, 206, 226-7 

Nasir-i Khusrau, 191, 208 

Naiima al-Duha, 53, 58, 75 

Nikomachos, 151, 202 

Nizam al-Mulk, 182 
Al-Nubasht, 151 

Nuh II, 214 
Al-Nu'man III, 5, 19 
Al-Nu'man ibn 'Adi, 41 

Nur al-Dln (Zangid), 208, 224 

Nuzha al-Wahabiyya, 213 



Plato, 200 
Ptolemy, 151 
Pythagoras, 152 
Profiat Duran, 221 



Al-Qadir, 179, 207 
Al-Qahir, 143 
Al-Qa'im, 179, 181 

Qain, 6, 7 

Qalam, 136 

Qalam al-Salahiyya, 124 

Qamar, 145, 163 

Qand, 48, 57 

Qarlba, 37 

Al-Qasim ibn 'All ibn Nan', 160 
Al-Qasim ibn Zurzur, 148, 162 
Al-Qazwlnl, 188 
u'ad, 19 
umriyya, 136 
aina, 37 

^urai? al-Jarrahl, 153, 160-1 

Qusta ibn Luqa, 152, 173 



Al-Rabab, 46, 54 

Rablha, 75 

Radhadh. See Abu'1-Fadl 
Al-Radl, 143 

Ra^mat Allah, 75, 89 

Raiq, 134, 148 

Ra'iqa, 46, 54, 147 
Al-RaqutI, 201, 227 
Al-Rasmd, 181 

Rayya', 87 

Al-Razi, Fakhr al-Din, 182, 200, 206 
Al-RazI, Muhammad ibn Zakariyya, 

142, 143, 152, 172, 174 
Al-Rubayyi' bint Mu'awwidh, 27 

Rudakl, 143 



Saadia. See Sa'Id ibn Yusuf 
Sabur ibn Ardashlr, 180 
Sadaqa ibn Abl Sadaqa, 122 
Sa'd ibn Abl Waqqa, 48, 57 
Sa'dl, 203 
SafI al-Dln 'Abd al-Mu'min, 184, 

196, 199, 201, 202, 203, 204, 2O5, 

206, 209, 216, 227-8 

Sa'ib Khathir, 46, 47, 48, 49, 51, 
53-4, 55, 60, 81, 85 

Sa'fda (Sa'da), 75 

Sa'id ibn Ahmad, 144, 185 

Sa'id al-Ahwal, 183 

Sa'Id ibn al-'As, 55, 57 

Sa'id ibn Yusuf (Saadia), 174-5 

Saif, 123 

Saif al-Daula, 164, 175 
Al-SajzI, Abu'l-'Abbas, 159 

Salah al-Din (Saladm), 192, 193, 
194, 224 

Salama al-Wasif, 157 

Salifa, 143 
Al-Sahh (Ayyubid), 193 

Sallam al-Abrash, 103 

Sallama al-Oass, 63, 75, 82, 85, 
86 

Sallama al-Zarqa', 75, 85, 87 

Salma, 46, 54 

Salmak, 106 

Salman al-Farisf, 38 

Samha, 136 

Sanjar, 213 
Al-SarakhsI, 142, 152, 172 

Sargon, 17 
Al-Sarkhadi, 195 
Al-Saruqi, TaqI al-Dln, 198 

Sayyid Amir, 'All, 40, 65 
Al-ShafiX 29, 31 

Shah of Khwarizm, 183, 184. See 
Jalal al-Dln 

Shajl, 163 

Shapur II, 7 

Shams al-Daula, 180 

Shams al-Dln al-Juwainl, 227 



256 



INDEX TO PERSONS 



Al-Shanqftf, Ahmad, 164 

Sharaf al-Dln Harun, 228 

Shanyya, 134, 140, 141, 148, 162, 

170 
Al-Shibll, 36 

Shikla, 1 19 

Al-Shirazf, Abu Ishaq, 31 
Al-Shirazf, Qutb al-Dfn, 203, 204 

Shuhcla, 89, 121, 135 

Shlrln, 25, 37. See also Slrin 

Shfrkuh, 192 

Sihr, 135 

Sind! ibn 'All, 176 

Sinn, 37, 46, 54 

Siyyat, 82, 84, 93, 113, 115, 147 
Al-SughdI. See Hakim ibn Ahwas 

Suhail, 86 

Sukaina bint al-Husain, 48, 56, 80 

Sulaim ibn Sallarn, 117, 131 

Sulaiman ibn 'All, 84, 92 

Sulaiman ibn al-Qaar, 140 
Al-Suli, 171 

Sulml ibn Rabfa, 8 

Sultan al-Daula, 207 
Al-Suyutl, 9 

Syed Ameer Ali. See Sayyid Amir 
'All 



Al-Tabarl, 41, 166 

Tahir, 168 
Al-taT, 179, 207 

Tamlm, 190 

Tanbl, 89 
Al-Tanukhl, 164 

Tarab, 163 

tarafa, 5, 12, 14 

Thabit ibn Qurra, 152, 172, 173, 216 

Thabja al-Hadramiyya, 41 

Thamad, 19 
Al-ThaqafI, 157 

Tlmur, 216 
Al-Tirmidhi, 24 

Tubal, 7 

Turanshah, 193 
Al-fusI, Naslr al-Dln, 206 

fuwais, 13, 45, 46, 47, 50, 51, 
52-3, 55, 58, 75. 79, 125 



'Ubaida, 133 

'Ubaidallah ibn Abl Bakr, 33 
'Ubaidallah ibn 'Ali ibn Nafi', 160 
'Ubaidallah ibn Hunain al-Hirl, 

56, 80 

'Ubaidallah ibn Umayya, 145 
'Ubaidallah al-'Utbl, 214 
'Ubaidallah ibn Ziyad, 57 
Ugdai, 184 
'Ulayya, 213 
'Ulayya bint 'All ibn Nafi', 160 



'Umar, 25, 26, 39, 41-2, 44, 86 

'Umar II, 42, 82, 66, 141 

'Umar ibn Abl Rabl'a, 74, 86 

'Umar al- Khayyam, 182 

'Umar ibn 'Affan, 88 

Umayya, 20 

Umayya ibn AbI'1-Salt, ii f 22, 27 

Umm Abl'l-Jaish, 213 

Umm 'Auf, 89 

Uns al-Qulub, 163 

'Uqqab, 93 

'Uraib, 132, 140 

'Uthman, 25, 39, 42-3, 44, 52, 53, 

54. 5 6 > 79 
'Uthman ibn Muhammad I (Al- 

Andalus), 163 
'Uthman al-Ghuzzl, 213 



Wahba, 136 
Al-Walid I, 61, 62, 64, 75, 78, 80, 81, 

86, 89, 112, 123 
Al-Walid II, 59, 64-5, 81, 82, 83, 85, 

88, 89, 112, 131, 135, 142 
Wallada, 186, 212 
Al-WaqshI, Abu'l-Husain, 187, 212 

Warda, 213 
Al-Warraq, Muhammad ibn Isliaq, 

180, 215 

Wasif al-Turkl, 162 
Wasif al-Zamir, 143, 162 
Al-Wathiq, 94, 96-7, 118, 121, 122, 
124, 125, 131, 135, 140, 148, 
I59i 162 



Ximenes, 216 



Yahya ibn Abl Manur, 96, 128, 

167 

Yahya ibn 'Adi, 201 
Yahya ibn 'All ibn Nafi', 160 
Yahya ibn 'All ibn Yahya ibn Abl 

Mansur, 135, 142, 149, 150, 167-8 
Yahya ibn Khalid al-Barmakl, 92, 

135 

Yahya al-Ma'mun, 187 
Yahya [ibn] al-Khudujj. See 

Al-Khudujj 
Yahya al-Makkl, 94, i6, 113-4, 

"5, "9, 153 

Yahya ibn Masawaihi, 126 
Yahya ibn Nafis, 132 
Yahya Qail, 64, 88 
Al-Yamani, Ahmad ibn Muhammad, 

188 

Yaqut, 228 
Al-Yazurl, 191 

Yazld I, 58, 60, 64, 66 



INDEX TO PERSONS 



Yazld II, 83, 64, 73, 81, 82, 85, 

86, 87, 89 
Yazld III, 65, 87 
Yazid Haura', 93, 94, 118 
Yuhanna ibn al-Batriq, 127 
Yuhanna ibn Khailan, 175 
Yunus al-Katib, 64, 67, 75, 77, 

78, 80, 82, 83-4, 87, 105, 113, 153 
Yusuf ibn 'Umar al-Thaqafi. See 

Al-Thaqafi 



Al-Zafir (Fatimid), 192 
Al-Zahir ('Abbasid), 183 
Al-?ahir (Fatimid), 191 
Zaid ibn Ka'b, 58 
Zaid ibn Rifa'a, 214 
Zaid ibn al-Jalis, 58 
Al-Zajjaj, 33 



257 

See Al- 



Zakariyya al-QazwInl. 

QazwinI 
Al-Zanjani, 214 

Zalzal, 73, 94, 95, 108, 117, 118-9, 

124, 203, 206 
Zarqun, 98 

Zaryat (sic), 148, 163 
Zirnab, 46, 54 
Ziryab, 7, 99, 108, no, 128-30, 

1 60 

Ziryab (2), 162 
Ziyadat Allah I, 129 
Al-Zubaid! al-Tunburl, 133 
Al-Zubair ibn Dahman, 94, 123-4 
Al-Zuhrl, Ibrahim ibn Sa'd, 22, 104 
Zunam al-Makkl. See Ahmad ibn 

Yahya al-Makkl 
Zunam, 131, 158 
Zurzur al-Kablr, 96 



SUBJECT AND GEOGRAPHICAL INDEX 



ab'ad. See bu'd 

'Abbasids, 22, 64-5, 72, 76. Chaps. 

v, vi, yii 
abubd, xiv 
abttsallk, 197, 204 
Abyssinia, 151 
Accordatura, 70, 73 
adhan, 33-4 
Adharbaijan, 182 
Afghanistan, 99 
Africa, 44, 129, 138, 188-9, 198, 204, 

206, 221-2. See Algeria, Morocco, 

Tripoli, Tunis 
Afshana, 218 
Afsun, 225 
Aghlabids, 138 
ajnds. See jtns 
alalu, xiv 

Aleppo, 164, 175, 180, 193, 229 
Algeciras, 129, 186 
Algeria, 99 
allian. See lahn 
'Allds, 138 
'alima, 102 
allu, xiv 
Almeria, 223 

Almohades. See Muwahhids 
Almoravides. See Murawids 
'an, xiv 
'dndh, xiv 
Al-Anbar, 4, 91, 94 
Al-Andalus, 65, 97, no, 129-31, 136, 

138, 144, 146, 156, 160, 163, 170, 

177-8, 184, 198, 200-1, 204, 206, 

209, 211-12, 2l6, 223 

Ansar, The, 21, 27 

Anushtiginids, 182 

anwd'. See naw 1 

Arbela, 182 

armunlql, 210 

'artaba, 209 

'am$, 49, 72, 150 

a$M. See a$ba' 

asba', 52, 71-2 

Asia Minor, 99, 181-2 

o$/(pl. Mfw/), 151 

Assyria. See Babylonia-Assyria 

asttikhftsiyya, 69, 151 

awdz (pi. awazat], 203, 204-5 

awtdr, 133 (sing, watar) 



awzan. See wazn. 

Ayyubids, 182, 193 

'azf, 8, 64. See mi'zaf, mi'zafa 



Ba'albak, 173 

Babylonia- Assyria, vii-xi, 4, 17, 39, 

44 

Badr, 10, 11 

Baghdad, 87, 92, 94-6, 99, no, 
112-3, 115, 117-20, 124, 126, 129, 
133, 136-7, 139, 141-3. !52, 155-6, 
159, 162, 164, 169, 171-4, 178-9, 
181, 184-6, 193, 195-6, 198, 
210-11, 214, 216-7, 22 3 - 4 226 
Al-Bahrain, 2, 4, 21 
Bagtiglnids, 182 
Bairut, 128 

Bait al-hikma, 96, 126, 128 
bamm, 70, 74 
bandair, 211 
Banu 'Ad, i, 10, n, 19 

'Amallq, xii, i, 3, 4, 10 
Aws, 21 
Azd, 2, 3 
Bahz, 85 
Fahm, 57 

Hamdan. See Hamdanids 
Hamdan, 2 

Banu' 1-Iianth ibn Ka'b, 55 
Banu Himyar, 2 
Jadls, i, 19 
Jumh, 77 
Jurhum, 3 

Laith ibn Bakr, 118, 123 
Makhzum, 52, 87, 119 
Nadir, 3 
Naufal ibn 'Abd al-Muttalib, 

Banu'l-Khazraj, 21 
Banu Khuza'a, 113 

Kinana, 131 

Quraiza, 3 

Sama ibn Lu'ai, 134 

Sulaim, 85 

Taghlib, 18 

Tai', 19 
Tamim, 132 
fasm, i, 19 
Thamud, i, 19 



258 



SUBJECT AND GEOGRAPHICAL INDEX 259 



Banu Thu'l, 84 

,, Zubair ibn al-'Awwam, 131 

,, Zuhra, 86 
baqiyya, 153 
barbat, 6, 12, 15, 16, 29, 30, 64, 69 

73, 95, 209 

Barbiton. See mi'zaf, barbat 
baslt, basdt (pi. fcwsw/), 106, 107, 198 
Al-Basra, 84, 116, 126, 135, 143, 162, 

214, 218, 220 
bataih, 200 
Bedouins, 6, 9, in 
Beyrout. See Bairut 
Bosra, 5 
Bow, 155, 210 

bu'd (pi. ab'ad), 151, 153 
Bukhara, 181, 218 
buq, 47, 154, 155, 208, 210 
buq [bi'l-qasaba], 210 
bug al-naftr, 154 
Bunds, 182 

busallk, 197. Sec abusallk 
bustit. See fcasF/ 
buzurk, 197, 204 
Byzantium and Byzantines, ix, 6, 

12, 43-4, 46, 59, 60, 65, 69, 70-1, 

76-7, 90-1, 105, 109, 145-6, 151, 

166, 205 



Cairo, 185, 189, 198, 219, 230 

Cantilation. See taghblr 

Carmona, 220 

Castanets, 211. See kdsa, sinj 

Cazlona, 145 

Ceylon, 165 

Chaldsea, 2, 4, 71 

Chanting. See qard'a 

China, 21, 61, 165 

Clappers. See ndqns, musdfiqdt 

Classicists, 147 

Colleges, 96, 100, 126, 128, 180, 

182-5, 190-1, 193, 224 
Constantinople, 215 
Cordova, 99, 100, 128-31, 139, 144-5, 

184, 186, 201, 212, 220 

dabdab, 154, 207, 208, 210 
Al-Dailam, 119, 155, 179 
dd'ira (tambourine), 38 
dd'ira (prelude), 200 
ddjina, n, 14 
Damascus, 5, 37, 59, 62, 76-8, 80, 

83, 85, 112, 182, 185, 193, 195, 

208, 223-5, 2 3 
$arb, 73 

Dar al-ljukma, 191, 193 
darj, 199, 200 
darwlsh, dervish, 194, 196 
dastdn, 70, 103 



dastdndt, 205 

daur (pi. adwdr), 106, 224, 228 

Days of Ignorance. See jdhiliyya 

Deccan, The, 165 

Delhi, 190 

Denia, 186 

Dhu'l-Nunids, 186-7 

dll, dhil, 204 

diydnai, 7, 155 

Diyar Bakr, 180, 182 

Drums. See tabl, naqqdra, dabdab, 

qas'a, km, duhul 
duff, xiv, 4, 6, 7, 13, 16, 26-7, 30, 41, 

47, 53, 74, 80, 109, 154, 211 
duhul, 208 
Dulcimer, 221 



Effects of music, 35. See Ethos. 
Egypt, 37, 39, 44, 90, 102, 138, 

144-5, 174, 178, 189, 191, 2OI, 
217, 221, 223, 225 

elal, xiv. 

Ethos, 76, 109, 196, 220 



far' (pi. furu'}, 204 

Farab, 175 

Fars, 167, 179-80, 182 

Fatimids, 138, 189 

Festivals, 9, 10, 14, 17, 35 

Flute. See nay, shabbdba, saffdra, 

qasaba, shdhln, yard' 
Four great singers of Islam, 80, 81 
France, 99 
fuqahd', 194 
furu 1 . See far' 
furu ddsht, 200 
t, 189 



Genres. See;tns 
gharlbat al-husain, 204 
gharlbat al-muharra, 205 
Ghassan, 3, 6/9, n, 14, 21, 44, 

55,154 

ghazal, 27, 37, 199, 200 
Ghaznawids, 181, 183 
ghma' 4, 15, 19, 26, 29, 33, 64, 69-70, 

108, 125, 136, 152, 212, 224 
ghind' al-mauqi' (al-muwaqa') t 51 
ghwa' murtajal, 14 
ghind' al-mutqan, 49-51, 61, 78 
ghind' al-raqlq, 50, 51 
ghind' al-rukbdn, rakbdnl, 50, 61, 

7 8 
ghirbal, 28, 30, 211 

ghishak, 210 
Ghurids, 183 
Ghuzz, 183, 213 
Granada, 186, 189, 212, 227 



260 SUBJECT AND GEOGRAPHICAL INDEX 



Greece and Greeks, xi, 2, 12-13, 
16, 44, 60, 76, 96, 104, 106-7, 
109, 126, 127, 145, 150-3, 166-7, 
171, 173, 175, 186, 196, 200, 
202-3, 214, 218. See Byzantium 

Greek Works in Arabic, 150, 152, 
201-2, 218, 220 

Guitar. See murabba* 



HADITH, 24, 41 
Hadramaut, xh, 2 
Hafsids, 189 
Hajar, 2 

Mi. 8 

Kama, 193 

Hamasa, The, 2, 9 

tfamddn (mode), 204 

Hamdanids, 139, 143, 180, 181, 182 

Hamadhan, 218 

Hammudids, 186 

Hanball sect, 29, 30, 139, 194 

HanafI sect, 29, 34, 194, 195 

HanafI music, 3, 15 

harf, 108 

Harmony, 72, 73 

Harp. See jank, salbdq 

harlm, 10, 41, 62, 68 

Harran, 109, 173, 175, 218, 220 

Hashimids, 182 

hazaj, 15, 50-1, 53, 56, 71, 87, 111-12 

Hebrews, 7, 17, 22, 221. See Jews, 

Hidaya, The, 31, 194 

hija, 9 

Al-Hijaz, 2-5, 8, 14, 21, 27, 29, 
43-4, 46, 49, 56, 62, 69, 70, 
74-7, 91, 113, 125, 132, 148, 154, 
181, 190 

hijaz, hijdzl (mode), 197-8, 203, 204 

hijdz al-kablr, 204 

tyjaz al-mashriql, 204 
Al-Hilla, 180 

Hims, 193 

Himyarites. See Banu Himyar 

Himyarl music, 3, 15 
Al-Hlra, 3-6, 9, 12, 14, 19, 44, 47, 

' 49. 55, 69, 154 

faar, 204 

jiudd', 14, 25, 29, 33, 49, 6i f 78 

Hudids, 186 

liusain, husainl, 197-8, 204-5 

(tusiin Ma'bad, 82 

Hydraulis, 155 



126 

ibbubu, imbubu, xiv. 
Idrlsids, 138 
Ikhshldids, 138, 147 
Ilak Khans, 183 
lidigizids, 182 



India, 21, 165-6. See Sind, Deccan 

Influence of music. See Ethos. 

infisal, 153 

inqildb al-ramal, 205 

inshdd, xiv, 27 

intiqdl, 151 

insiraf, 200 

iqiirah, 122 

iqwa, 13 

'irdq (mode), 197, 204 

'irdq al-'arab (mode), 204 

'Iraq 'Arab! (province), 4, 21, 27, 

43, 47, 56, 58, 69, 74, 77> Qi, 95. 

99, 145, 169, 178-9, 200-1, 228 
'Iraq 'Ajami, 99, 179, 180-1, 227 
Iqd' (pi. iqadt), 15, 47, 50-1, 71-2, 

105-6, 121-2, 124, 126, 147, 176, 

205, 216, 224 
irkha, 153 
i'rdb, 73 

isbahdn, 204. See isfahdn 
Ishtar, 17 

isfahdn (mode), 150, 197, 203 
Isfahan (town), 205, 218 
isjdh. See sajdh 
istihldl al-dil t 204 
Italy, 99 



Al-Jabal. See 'Iraq 'ArabI 
Jaen, 188 

jdhiliyya, I, 9, 12, 17, 19 
Jahwarids, 186 
jalditl. See juljul 
jam' (pl.jumti), 151 
jamd'a (pi. jama 1 at), 203 
Janad, 138 
Jand, 181 
jank (pl.junuk), 6, 7, 12, 16, 18, 29, 

45, 47, 74, 79, 155. 210 
javddatdn, n 
Jarmaqs, Jammiqa, 6 
jaza'a, 106 
Jazz, 106 

Jews, 2-4, 7, 212. See Hebrews 
jinn, 7, 21, 75, 80, 130 
jtns (pi. ajnds), 105, 149, 151, 153, 

205 

juljul (pl.jaldjit), 6, 16, 17 
jumu 1 . See jam 1 
Jurjan, 138 



Ka'ba, 3 

kdhin, 20, 21 

kamdnja (pi. kamdnjdt), 210. See 

ghishak 

karddniyya, 204 
karsl, 200 
karlna, n 
kdsa (pi. ^asa^), 208, 211 



SUBJECT AND GEOGRAPHICAL INDEX 261 

maqdrna (pi. maqdmdt), 203, 204-5 

maqdti'. See maqta' 

maqta', 106 

Ma'rib, 2, xii 

marthiya, 10, 19 

Marwamds, 180 

masdar, 200 

mashriql, 204 

Mashu, vii, viii 

Mathematics. See 'W/MW riyafyya 

mathnd, 70 

mathlath, 70 

wflwfo (pi. mawall), 45, 67, 90 
Al-Mausil, 38, 1 1 6, 180, 217 

wwyfl, 204 

mazhar, 211 

mazmum, 204 

Mazyadids, 180 

Mecca, 3, 8, 10, n, 12, 17, 19-21, 31, 
37, 55, 5 6 > 59, 62, 68-9, 74, 77-80, 
86, 88, 113, 115-6, 119, 191, 226 

Mesopotamia, 2, 4, 6, 39, 44, 139, 

171, 180, 182, 190, 226 
Al-Medlna, 3, 4, 17, 21, 39, 42-5, 47-8, 
50-2, 54-5, 57- 59, 60-2, 67-9, 74, 
79, 81-2, 84-6, 118, 121-3, 132, 

134-5, 171 
Merv, 94 
Military music. See fabl khdndh, 

nauba 

Mirdasids, 180 
mi'zaf (pi. ma'dzif), 3, 46, 76, 

209 
mi'zafa (pi. ma'dzif), 4, 8, 16, 46-7, 

55, 109, 122, 133, 155 
mizhar (pi. mazdhtr), 4-6, 9-10, 15, 

19, 46, 209, 221. See Lute 
mizmdr (pi. mazdmlr), 4, 6, 16, 

25,26,30,33,41,47,76,93.109, 

121, 131, 154, 158, 188. 
mizmdr, xiv 
Modes, Melodic, 149, 197, 203, 204. 

Sec asdbi', nagham, naghamdt 
Modes, Rhythmic, 149. See Iqa'at, 

turaq 

Morocco, 21, 61, 99, 138, 188-9 
Mu'allaqat, The, 2, 3, 18 
mu'adhdhm, 25, 33, 37, 191 
mud^ina, u. See ddjina 
Mufaddaliyyat, The, 2 
Mughals, 184, 227 
mughannl, mughann, 9, 51, 170-1, 

215-6 

mughnl, 210, 228 
Mujahids, 186 
mujannab al-dll, 204 
mukhdhf, 197. See zlrdfkand 
mukhannath (pi. mukhannathun), 

30, 44, 45, 53, 55, 61, 143 
mukhlas, 200 
Multan, 165 



AAfl/y al-khaflf, 106 

^a/^ i^f/, 71, 141 

Khaibar, 4 

Khakhu, xi, xii 

khalds, 200 

Khazar, 151 

KHALIFA, 39 

khunthawl, 107 

Khurasan, 65, 90-1, 99, 137, 145, 

150, 155, 172, 181, 210, 216 
khutba, 193 
Khuzistan, 179-80 
Khwarizm, 99, 178, 182-4, 208 
Kimash, xi 

kindr, kinndr, kinndra, 6, 16 
kinnlra, 209 
kinndr, kinord, 5, 7 
kirdn, 6, 15, 155 
Kirman, 179, 180, 181 
Kithara, 8 
kuba, 30, 211 
Al-Kufa, 46, 56, 91, 116, 121, 131, 132, 

143 

Kurdistan, 99 
bus, 38 
kuwdsht, 204 



Man, 1 8 

lahn (pi. alhdn, luhun), 15, 18, 26, 

27, 33, 69, 127, 151, 197, 205, 212 
Lakhmids, 4, 5 
Lute, 14, 73, 75. See 'ud, mizhar, 

kirdn 

Lihyanids, viii 
Libraries, 100, 180, 185, 192 



Ma'an, Ma'ln, xii 

ma'dzif, 7, 24, 31. Sec mi'zaf, 

mi'zafa, 'azf 
Madagascar, 165 
Al-Mada'in, 46 
Madrid, 216 

Magan, Makkan, xi, xii, i 
Magic, magician, 6. 20, 21. See 

Soothsayer 
Mahdlds, 182 
mahtar duduk, 227 
Maisan, 41 

majrd, 52, 71, 72, 106 
mdkhurl, in, 112, 117, 158 
Makuraba. See Mecca 
Malaga, 186, 188 
maldhi, 4, 51, 60, 64, 141 
Malay Archipelago, 65 
MalikI sect, 29, 34, 98 
Malukhkha, xi, xii. See Banu 

'Amallq 
Mamali, vii 
JVIamluks, 178, 193 



262 SUBJECT AND GEOGRAPHICAL INDEX 



murabba', 16 

murdbit, 194 

Murawids, Murabitun, 188, 189, 195 

Murcia, 225-7 

murtajal, 47, 79, 85 

musdfiqdt, 211 

mftslqi, 127-8, 152, 168-9, 172-5, 

214, 221-2, 224, 226 

Musran, yiii. 
mustakhbir, 200 
mustazdd, 200 
Mu'tazalf sect, 96, 104, 127 
mutlaq, 52 
mutnb, 51 

Muwahhids, 178, 189 
muwalladun, 98 
muwattar, 6, 15, 16 
muwashshah, 198 
muzdawaj, 150 



Nabataeans, xii, xv, 2, 4-6, 16, 166 

Wflfcra (pi. nabarat), 52, 70, 73 

wa/Zr, 154, 210 

ndgan, xiv. 

nagham, naghamdt (sing, naghma), 

5 1 * 7, 73 75, 8 5 I0 5, 121, 127, 

132, 142, 148, 151, 166, 168, 171, 

197, 205, 213 

nd'ih, nauh, xiv, 10, 34, 53 
Najahids, '182-3 
naqqdm, 210 
ndqur, 16 
ndqus, 6 
o?6, 5, 8, 15, 19, 42, 49, 50, 56, 

57, 78 
wasW, 198 
Na$rids, 189 
nauba (pi. naubat), 153-4, J 9^"9 

200, 205 

nauruz, 197, 204 
waw5, 197, 204 
naw' (pi. anwa'), 153 
way (pi. wa>'a/), 7, 104, 155, 210 
nay al-iraql, 29 
nay zundmt, 131 
neglnah, xiv. 



nigutu, ningutu, x. 

Nlsabur, 182. 

Nizamiyya Colleges, 182, 195, 224 

Notation, 72, 108, 203 

nitqaira t 210 

nuqra (pi. nuqardt), 73 

nuzha, 209, 229 



'Oktnechos, 151 
Organ, 155. See wghanun, 
Jydraulis 



Palestine, 174, 192-3, 214, 229 

Palmyra, xv, 5-6, 8, 22 

Pandore. See tunbur 

Persia and Persians, xi, 2, 4, 5, 
7, 12-3, 16, 43-6, 48-9, 53-4, 59, 
65, 69, 70, 73, 76-7, 80, 90-2, 
99, i5-6, in, 118, 120, 138, 141, 

H3, 149-5, 151, 155, 214 
Petra, xi, 5 

Phoenicia and Phoenicians, xiii, 8,22 
Plectrum, 130 
Poet. See sha'ir 
Portugal, 188 
Psaltery. See qdnun, nuzha, 

mi'zafa (?) 



qadlb, (pi. qidbdn), 13-4, 16, 30, 

47, 54, 74, 79-8o, 109, 122, 211 
qdfiya, 150 

qaina (pi. qaindt, qiyan), 3, 7, 10, 
13, 24, 40, 84, 102, 171, 196 

Qairawan, 129, 138 

qdnun (pi. qawdnln), 152, 198, 200. 
See nuzha 

qara'a, 33 

qarastun, 128 

qarn ' (pi. qurun, aqrdn), xiv. 

Qarnawu, xii. 

qarnu, xiv. 

qas'a (pi. qasa'dt, qis 1 ), 154, 210 

qasaba (pi. qaabdt, qisab), 16, 47. 
'See qussdba 

qaslda (pi. qasa'id), 3, in, 153 

qaul, 200 

qawl, 107 

qeren, xiv. 

Qift, 229 

qtfa (pi. ^f/fl'), 153, 198, 200 

^fiam, qith'dva, 153, 209 

qunbuz, qupuz, qupuz, 6, 209 

qundhura, qundura, 6 

Quraish, 3, 10, n, 20, 21, 28, 42, 

4 8 , 54, 57, 59, 68, 84, 89, 115 
qussdba, 4, 16, 47, 210 
QUR'AN, i, 7, 15-16, 19, 21-3, 

25, 27-8, 33, 41, 66, 95, 102, 124 



rdbdb, 29, 210 

rdhawi, 197, 204 
Al-Raiy, 116, 122, 155, 174, 218, 220 

rajaz, 9, 14, 32, 34 

rakbdnl, 14, 42, 50 

ramal, 71, 79, 80, 106, 158 

ramal al-dll, 204 

ramal al-mdya, 205 

ramal tunbftrl, 71, 106 
Al-Raqqa, 94 

rad, 205 

ra$d al-dll, 204 



SUBJECT AND GEOGRAPHICAL INDEX 263 



vast, 195, 204 

vdsim, 107 

rdwl, 9, 66, 114, 167 

rdwisln (sic), 199 

Rebec. See rabdb 

Reciter, See rdwl 

Red Sea, 165 

Reed-pipe. See nay, mizmdr, zamr, 

surnd, nay zitndml 
Rhythm. See iqd', a$l. 
Romanticists, 147 
Rome, vii, xi, 17, 137 
rukbdn. See rakbdnl 

Saba', xii, 2 

Sabaeans. See Saba' 

Sabians, dbi'a, 109, 173, 218 

Sabu, viii. 

foffdra (pi. $affdrdt), 210 

Saffarids, 138 

saj', 9, 20, 32 

sajah, 52 

salbdq, 155 

Salgharids, 182 

Saljuqids, 178, 181 

salmak, 203, 204 

samd', 22, 29, 31, 136, 146, 169, 

194-5 

Samarra, 96, 139, 162, 169 
Samanids, 138, 143, 145, 183 
Samarqand, 100 
sdmidun, 15 
an'a, 138, 182 
anj. See jank 
sdqa, 208 

Saragossa, 186, 189, 221-2 
Sarakhs, 172 
arkhad, 230 
aut, 51, 127, 151 
Scale, Persian, 148, 205, 206 
Scale, Pre-Islamic, 15, 69, 74, 155, 

209 

Scale, Systematist, 206 
Scale, Zalzahan, 203-6 
Schools of music, no, 117 
Seville, 145, 186-7, 195, 198, 206, 

221 

shabbdba, 210 
Shabwat, xii. 
shadd, 197 
Shafi'I sect 26, 34 
shdhln, 30, 34, 210 
shahnaz, 204 

shahrtid, shdhrud, shahrtidh, 154, 209 
shd'tr, xiv, 3, 5, 6, 7, 9-10, 21, 23, 35, 

in 

shajan, xiv. 
shaqf, 211 
sharrti, xiv. 

Shl'a sect, 104, 179, 191 
shidnt, xiv. 



shiggdion, xiv 

shigfi, xiv. 

Shilb, 1 88 

shir, xiv. 

shi'r, xiv. 

Shlraz, 213 

shlru, x. 

shu'ba (pi. shu'ab), 204 

shuhdj. See sajah. 

Sicily, 187, 190 

slka, 200 

sindd, 15, 50, 56 

Sind, 99, 166 

Singing-girls, II, 12, 19, 24-7, 37. 
See qaina, ddjina, karina 

finj (pi. simuj), 16, 47, 154, 155, 211 

siyydh, 52, 108 

Soothsayer. See shd'ir 

Spain. See Al-Andalus 

Species. See anwd'. 

Strings of the lute, 70 

?ufl, 35, 194 

Sukmanids, 182 

Sulaihids, 182 

Sunn! sect, 81 

Sura (town), 174 

surnd, surnay, 121, 154, 208, 210 

surydnai, 7, 155 

Syria, 2, 5-6, 12, 39, 43~4, 53, 
67-8, 70, 74, 76-7, 91, 95-6, 99, 
105, 116, 126, 138-9, 143-4, W 
155, 166, 178, 180-2, 190-3, 195, 
208, 223, 229 



tabaqa (pi. tabaqdt), 103, 107, 108 
'f abaristan, '99, 138, 155, 169, 181 
tabbalu, xiv. 
'tabl, xiv, 7, 16, 30, 34, 47, 64, 74, 

109, 121, 154-5, 208 

tabl khdndh, 199, 206-7 
'tabl al-markab, (al-murakkab), 210 
'tabl al-mukhannath, 211 
'tabltawll, 210 
Tad'mor. See Palmyra 
taghblr, 33 
Tahirids, 138 
tahlll, xiv, 7, 33-4 
Al-Ja'if, 4, 8, 38 
tajzi'a, 106 
talbiyya, 8, 34 
talhin, 18, 222 
ta'ltf, 127, 151 
Tambourines. See duff, mazhar, 

ghirbdl, tdr t bandair, tirydl. 
tamdld, 197 
Tamna', xii. 

tanln (pi. tanlndt), 51, 151, 153. 
Tanukh, 4 
tanbur. See tunb&r. 
faq-i Khusrau, 46 



264 SUBJECT AND GEOGRAPHICAL INDEX 



flV, 211 

farab, 60 

fara'iq (sing, fariqa), 213 

tardna, 200 

tarannum, 13 

tavjl', 12 

Tartary, 99 

tartlb, 107 

terff/, 14 

ta'thlr. See Ethos. 

Taverns, 12, 14 

tehillah, xiv. 

*%!/, in, 199 

lhaqll awwal, 51, 54, 71, 148, 213 

thaqllthanl, 71 

/ito, xiv. 

%5J, 211 

Toledo, 187-8 

toph> xiv, 

Transoxiana, 138, 143, 175 

Tripoli, 99, 193 

tudrl, 14 

tunbUr (pi. tan&btv), 5-7, 31, 47, 

57, 74, 76, 109, 133, 154-5, 158-9 

161, 171, 188, 209 
funbur al-baghdadl, 15, 154, 209 
'(unbar al-khurasanl, 149, 155 
funbur al-mlzanl, 15, 69, 74, '155 
Tunis, Tunisia, 99, 129, 138, 189 
furaq. See twqa 
Turkestan, 183 
Turks, 137, 141-3, 145-6, 193-4, 

205, 226. See Saljuqids, 

Mamluks, 
fuvqa (pi. twaq), 151, 166. See 

tar&'tq. 
TUS, 226 
ttishiya, 200 



'*d (pi. Wn), 5, 7. *5A 19, 29, 
47, 54, 61, 64, 69, 70, 74, 76, 80, 
93, 97* 98, 103-4, 107-8, no, 
122, 132, 154, 158, 171, 174-5, 
188, 196, 212-3, 217, 221-4 
'tid fdrisl, 73, 79, 108 
'tid kamil, 209 
qadlm, 208 
al-shabb&t, 73, 108, 118 

7 
^ud, to 

3, 9 

'ulama' (sin. 'o/fm), 100, 196 
'Mm nyc4iyya t 152, 219 
'UmSn, 2, 39, 138, 165, 181-2 
Umayyads, 21, 59-89, 104 



Umayyads (Al-Andalus), 98, 144, 

186 

unbfib t xiv. 
Uqailids, 180-1 

urghanun, urghan, 128, 210, 224 
Urtuqids, 182 
'ushshaq, 197, 204 
u$uL See a$l 



Valencia, 186 

Violin. See rabdb> kam&nja, 
ghishak 



wazn (pi. awz&ri), 73, 106-7, 209 

wilwal> xiv, 34 

Wood-wind. See Flute, Reed-pipe 



Xativa, 272 



Yahweh, 17 
Al-Yamama, 2, 18 

Al-Yaman, 3, 15, 21, 41, 77, 87, 138, 
181-3, 193, 208, 213 

yara', 210 

Yathil, xii. 

Yathrib, 21. See Al-Medlna 



Zabid, 138, 182 

za'ida (pi. zawa'id), 14, 72, no 

zaidan, 204 

Zairids, 186 

.ro/a/, 198, 212 

Zallaqa, 188 

gamaru, xiv. 

tamr (pi. ^ttwtJf), xiv, 45, 131, 173, 

210, 224. See mizmdr. 
Zamzam, 191 
Zangids, 182, 192 
zanktila, 197-8, 204 
tauj, 79 

gaurankand (sic), 204 
zawaid. See ^a'^a 
Zayanib, 83 
temer, xiv. 
-jfiwrnA, xiv. 
4fn^, 101 

zlrafkand, 197, 204. See mukh&lif. 
Ziyftrids, 138 
zummara, 210 
zunaml, zulaml. See w